

Existing OpenRC installations are not automatically switched over.
How does one manually switch over? Must they reinstall?
My GitLab profile’s readMe.MD states:
Hello. My first name is Roke, and I always shall, and have been since I gained my first computer, a software developer. I specialize in OS architectures and GUI consistency, accessibility, and ease of use.


Existing OpenRC installations are not automatically switched over.
How does one manually switch over? Must they reinstall?


Indeed: xdaforums.com/t/4692346/post-89709288 appears to elaborate quite well, if you agree with it. Thanks for the response.


Thank you. I’ll use that information about the USB ID for my report to KDE. However, could you elaborate somewhat? That is, would it be correct to ask for Plasma to not merely utilize the USB ID to identify whether a device is accessible, but test whether it can be accessed by MTP first, before presenting that option to the user? Regardless, per what you’ve said, I’ve consolidated my previously disparate reports under bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=486931.
Additionally, I’ll definitely mention on Bugzilla that incorporating some of the patches in that package would be a feasible implementation method. Relevantly, I’d like to use that package, but because I’m not using Edge, would adding that repository do any harm (for instance, would it be added with higher priority by default than existent repositories)?


Those criticisms seem reasonable. Regarding package signing, are you referring to github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/613#issuecomment-134361033? Additionally, that default for pip seems veritably insane. I understand using system packages, but modifying packages outside the virtual environment is definitely weird.


Can you elaborate?


The navigation bar disappearing and the mobile data connection needing manual re-enablement affects me too. I don’t think anyone has posted about them on the forum yet, though.
If only CalyxOS supported the Google Play Store, I would use that.


Yep, on the Forum they’re nowhere to be found, usually. I’m the reporter of the screen ghosting issue. Have you tried Support though? They offered me an RMA.


exFAT supports R&W between approximately Linux 3+, Windows 8+, and Android 13+. It should also support macOS. NTFS is significantly more reliable and functional, but only supports R&W on specific Android apps, is read-only on macOS, but is perfectly usable on new versions of Linux, and Windows 7+.

I can see 34, yet can’t see them.


I agree wholeheartedly. Do you end up checking your e-mails for FP employee responses to the Forum posts?


I use OpenSUSE, because it has YaST, which is basically the Control Panel in Windows. Without it, I’d have to use the terminal. It also installs on just about anything.


I agree with the first sentence, but the second is wrong due to Proton, and the third is demonstrably wrong if you take a look at their GitHub. Windows Caldulator is better than anything Linux has, and WinGet is a decent attempt at making Windows finally have a native package manager.
WinGet even does manage packages like you’d expect when installing and uninstalling MSIX packages, and the ease of merely requesting manifests even beats the OBS.
Of course they’re making good software. Why wouldn’t they be? They’re a competent software development company that much of the world chooses to rely upon. There’s gonna be a reason for it. System admins on a whole generally aren’t totally stupid.
Even whilst Balmer was CEO, some under-the-hood Windows and Azure changes were quite impressive. He merely screwed up everything he was able to touch, which admittedly was an absolute tonne.


Once the opposite occurred to me. Fedora overwrote my Windows installation. Dual-booting isn’t safe.
The UK used to have that. This year, 98-99% of NHS dentists shut down or became private. Conservatives, eh?
Like PowerShell does?