Ah, I thought you were using the shower as a way to cool down the air for your house. This makes way more sense.
Ah, I thought you were using the shower as a way to cool down the air for your house. This makes way more sense.
Any tips other than the fan…
I’ve never gotten this to work very well. Though I didn’t do it with a fan. Any tips?
If you have cool nights, setup fans up at night to bring the house down to a lower temperature. Close everything up in the morning when the outside temp starts rising above your inside temp. If your place is insulated reasonably and there’s no excessive sun from windows, it will stay cool for the day.
Protip: Setup the fans in all rooms on one side of a chokepoint in your house/apartment (stairwell/hallway) to exhaust, to encourage airflow. Open up all the windows on the other side for intake. It’ll also help reduce pockets of hot air left over from the day before.
Finally get involved in politics?
As a very long time Arch user I wouldn’t say “easy” like everyone else seems to. I absolutely would not suggest it for a first distro for someone, which is what I would classify as the “easy” level.
But if you’re comfortable with using Linux, the terminal, and being able to follow written documentation you’ll be able to do it just fine maybe with a little frustration the first time. If you’re installing to a laptop, make sure to look up your model on the wiki first.
Never!
They look questionable.
SELinux was a product of the NSA. Maybe the best thing that agency has done.
Not in my experience. Unless maybe if it causes loss of funds or other security issues, which usually get a fair response.
Are you saying the chemical plant provides the treatment or that one plant is somehow responsible for polluting 75% of American drinking water?
I think it’s equally true for product companies. Do you know how hard it is to get a company to prioritize bug fixing over feature work? Shy of a user revolt, or a friend of the CEO reporting an issue, bugs are almost always second priority or lower.
nah, nodes still need to pin the file for it to be permanent.
Woah, I didn’t even know about this one.
Desert Strike was so cool.
This is a conversation to have with a lawyer.
One of the better blunt rotations.
Being a 3rd place you can’t even walk to because you have to cross those huge parking lots and all the traffic they bring. Not to mention none of them had decent places to actually collect and hang out.