I don't think it actually corrupted the SSD, perhaps a module is missing or such, and that's why it goes into emergency mode. Have you tried mounting the drive from say, a live usb?
russjr08
Ctrl + Q (close window) in my browser instead of Ctrl + W (close tab)
Similarly, Ctrl + R when Discord has focus (when I thought Firefox was focused instead).
I published an app on the play store that purely relies on a persistent notification + wakelocks to keep the screen active (since the whole point of the app is to keep the screen awake) - Samsung was definitely the worst when it comes to this for my app, as I would receive endless support emails about people with Samsung devices where it would get killed, even when disabling battery optimization for my app. The other manufacturers listed there came up every now and then, but disabling battery optimization generally did the trick for them.
With there being nothing that I could do for my app, I tried disabling compatibility in the play store for a ton of Samsung models, but then I got even more emails about people wondering why it wasn't available anymore so I re-enabled it, but to this day there's still (AFAIK) zero things I can do to prevent the app from getting killed on those devices.
Thankfully Minecraft Dungeons does work via Proton, though I'm not super familiar with macOS so I'm not sure if Proton works for macOS given that Apple's platforms use Metal rather than Vulkan (though I hear a translation layer is being worked on for Vulkan->Metal).
This is one of the reasons I don't use GamePass, because it all goes through the crappy Microsoft Store which always gives me weird download errors, and when trying to research the issue it just leads to nothing that works.
God forbid you reinstall Windows and have your GamePass games on another drive. It won't let you re-use that partition because the games folder is "owned by someone else" even when you're signed into the same Microsoft account, and it won't let you delete it because its protected by Windows... You either have to nuke the whole partition, delete it from Linux, or go through the whole take-ownership ritual which is buggy at best.
They were incorrect.
One of the things I love the most about my Pixel watch is being able to listen to Spotify on a run, without lugging my phone with me. Do any of the smart bands have this?
I think that is only if you pass /
, I don't think the flag is required for /*
which is what is shown here - if I remember right, it's because the *
triggers the shell to expand the paths and that flag is only built to protect /
(from say, having an empty variable alongside /
).
I remember this from when Siri was first released. It was only available on the 4S if I remember right, and with a jailbroken device you could backport it since most of the assets and functionality was already there - sans the authentication keys.
It did not work well at all if you force enabled it on an unsupported device.
Or Always on Display, which usually only supports OLED capable devices could be force enabled on LCD devices, at the cost of your battery life.
Interesting, I'll probably just have to wait till either Bitwarden supports Passkeys, or wait till Firefox on Linux supports cross-device Passkeys (so, my phone for example) as yeah a 25 key limit is not likely to be worth purchasing an upgrade for just yet.
At the current moment, filtering is an app feature and isn't built into Lemmy itself unfortunately. Lemmy natively lets you block communities and users, but that's about it (with instance filtering coming up in the next version).