

Just checked and apparently it was already requested and marked as not planned. Oh well.
Just checked and apparently it was already requested and marked as not planned. Oh well.
Is there a way to make it do dark mode?
My goal every day is to end the (work)day with an empty inbox. I reply to or act on messages that I can, and I snooze messages I can’t yet handle to a later date when I expect to be able to.
An empty inbox then means I’ve handled everything I could and will be reminded of everything I couldn’t yet.
I think the issue with mailmindr is that it works completely independently from the web and phone app snooze functions. Messages “snoozed” with mailmindr would not be resurfaced when not using Thunderbird which sadly makes it a no go for me. I don’t think there is really a solution to that at this time.
If anyone knows a client that can snooze mail on Proton and Gmail, I’d love to know about it. Until then I’m stuck using the web interfaces and their official phone apps.
Aww that sucks. To be fair I did take a full image backup before attempting the upgrade in case something went awry.
Most images and distros are just Raspbian at their core and as such are pretty easy to upgrade.
I upgraded my homebridge/pihole from Bullseye to Bookworm just a few days ago and it went off without a hitch.
Soon enough the pictures will be clear enough to show that the supermassive object at the center of the universe is in fact your mom.
My entire life I’ve been avoiding Zelda games thinking they just weren’t for me. But when Nintendo added Link’s Awakening DX to Nintendo Online I decided to give it a try.
It’s just a lovely game. I love the graphics, the way it holds your hand a little more than earlier games, that feeling when the puzzles “click”, everything about it. It has turned me around on Zelda games and I intend to play the Oracle games when I get a chance.
SuSE, about 1999, although I didn’t really start ‘getting’ Linux until I tried Slackware a couple of years later. After that I’ve just been bouncing between trusty old Debian and different distros based on it.
Edit: I’ve also tried Gentoo, Arch and Mandrake briefly many years ago.