I am not up my ass. I am my ass.
I am not up my ass. I am my ass.
Okay, but she’s about 29.
Or that, with no explanation, they were used to classify the LCD as also being in need of replacement.
The explanation came when GN pressed them: fixing the blemishes meant switching out cases, and switching out cases meant switching LCDs. They actually put that ‘explanation’ in writing.
Update: Renaming ‘Firewall’ to ‘Z-Firewall’ via the KDE Menu Editor has put Firewall below Firefox, and I’m using that as a workaround.
It’s pretty odd, since Firewall should already be below Firefox alphabetically. But there you go!
edit: ‘.Firewall’ works as well.
It’s in my panel, sure. But sometimes I launch things from the menu too. It depends on what’s natural in the moment.
I feel like it can’t be usage, because I launch Firefox all the time. Unless it’s something weird like launching the firewall daemon on system startup counting towards KRunner’s statistic…? I just don’t know what factors go into deciding that order.
The configurator is called firewall-config, but it’s configuring a daemon called firewalld. It think it’s from Redhat. Comes standard with Fedora and OpenSuse, among others.
Maybe the ordering of ‘favorite’ plugins is what you’re talking about? If moving those up or down prioritizes krunner results, it unfortunately won’t fix this, as both Firewall and Firefox are sorted under applications. It’s a step in the right direction though.
Where do you change that? I can’t find it in application launcher settings/plasma search settings
It’s already way below Firefox, so I don’t think that changes search order. I’ll probably end up removing it if there’s no other way. Far form ideal, though.
Yes, do you know what the setting is called?
I am personally okay with that, as this is intended to be a simplification. A simplification by definition can’t include all information. But there’s a difference between omitting information and including misleading information. My problem’s with the latter in this case.
This looks misleading to me, because it indicates that grandchildren and their descendants can have very disproportionate amounts of genes from either grandparent.
The genes inherited from a parent do not sit in one continuous chunk, as indicated here.
Instead they are pulled randomly from all over the parent’s genome, and so they end up taking up places all over the offspring’s genome as well.
This has the effect that relatedness is consistently halved through the generations. (Though minor variations occur in the short term)
Because of the fedora-wearing neckbeard stereotype.
Har fået hul på Dwarf Fortress. Man er nødt til at Google ting hvert 10. minut. Men det er skægt! Det kunne godt være bedre til at kommunikere tydeligt, hvad der sker f.eks. i kamp. Tit skal man på jagt i logs og undermenuer for at få at vide, hvad ens dværge har gang i.
Ah, a heated gaming moment. We’ve all been there.
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A power source. It does not make sense.
What does ‘user device access’ mean?