Vladimir Trump, First Communist Comrade has spoken.
comador
one guy, one anus, one jar is more appropriate.
Those that remember know what I am talking about and I'd rather lock those images in the back of my brain than remember them more than that.
I meant uninstall the window manager and install XFCE, was a poor choice of wording.
Circa 2008 4chan "guy with pickle jar" comes to mind lol
Local Group Policies are your friend:
https://www.live2tech.com/how-to-disable-onedrive-windows-11-a-step-by-step-guide/
They do and it does work correctly with some configurations, but there are some obvious problems with existing applications and gpu vendor drivers that make multi monitor support a bitch.
It will probably take another 5+ years (already been 17 years, 4 actually being used in desktop managers) for the devs to resolve.
Works great... until you realize your GPU isn't liked by Wayland when you have more than one monitor lol. Then Wayland is uninstalled and you go back to Xorg or XFCE.
It's weird, had this issue with multiple monitors where wayland is either a glitchy refresh rate mess or just doesn't recognize at all. Nvidia, amd, discrete or dedicated, native driver or oem driver: they're all finicky under wayland when multiple monitors are used.
The real Mr Belvedere nut crushing story is even funnier than the rumors had it http://youtu.be/ytBmIzx5cTw?t=5m29s
Seems he wasn't on the plane, but his girlfriend was:
The 64-year-old was not on his aircraft when the incident occurred, but his girlfriend, Rain Andreani, 43, and her friend were onboard and rushed to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
The pilot was killed in the collision after "the plane veered from the runway causing it to collide with another parked plane," a statement read.
Better would have been:
Handful of users complain about 3rd Party Cables Melting Their 5090FE.
Good rule of thumb I've decided upon over the years for this:
"If the # of kernels present is greater than 3, reinstall for thee".
Figure 3 full kernel versions, excluding patches averages 12-18 months (based on kernel.org history). It's been a good metric to follow.