That is a classical windows mentality. "gnome is cheap macos clone". Gnome tries just to create a minimal and distraction free and polished DE. KDE tries to bulldose as many features as possible and that sacrifices stability and UX. Analogy would be similar to having a leaky water pipe in the roof. Gnome would fix the leaking pipe meanwhile KDE would give you a bucket and a few towels to clean that up in different ways.
"Installing APP does not require you to switch to it nor asking friends and family to use it. What it does is allowing them to reach out to you in a private way. By installing it you respect and support their choice of avoiding BAD_APP."
On the sidenote: Just recommend Signal. It uses phone number as identifier, easy to grow by using phone book, has good track record when glowies have a warrant and most importantly it's stable. It has flaws (no sms, not saving chat history) but there are no other alternatives available yet that beat signal for normies.
Just using duckduckgo. I'm not happy with my search results as they heavily prioritize clickbait CEO blogs instead of showing official documentation / sources.
It's a KINGSTON SA2000M81000G. Here is a "datasheet".
I've looked up some of the inode numbers in the logs and they point to some application state data in /var so reinstalling application could bring those files back.
I've never touched SMART before since I've assumed it's an HDD thing. Anyway. I've installed smartmontools. nvme ssds don't report smart stats like for hdds so this answer suggested looking for Percentage used in stead.
It could be true that the firmware is not optimal but I could not find any news about that like you have for the 980.
gnome software should keep firmware up to date in the background but just for good measure I ran it in live environment as well.
I will probably get a new ssd at some point in the future and maybe use this old one for non critical storage in the future.
root@archiso ~ # lsblk
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINTS
loop0 7:0 0 673M 1 loop /run/archiso/airootfs
sda 8:0 0 476.9G 0 disk
ââsda1 8:1 0 476.9G 0 part
sdb 8:16 0 119.2G 0 disk
ââsdb1 8:17 0 119.2G 0 part
sdc 8:32 1 14.4G 0 disk
ââsdc1 8:33 1 778M 0 part
ââsdc2 8:34 1 15M 0 part
nvme0n1 259:0 0 931.5G 0 disk
âânvme0n1p1 259:1 0 511M 0 part
âânvme0n1p2 259:2 0 931G 0 part
root@archiso ~ # btrfs check /dev/nvme0n1p2
Opening filesystem to check...
Checking filesystem on /dev/nvme0n1p2
UUID: 145c0d63-05f8-43a2-934b-7583cb5f6100
[1/7] checking root items
[2/7] checking extents
[3/7] checking free space tree
[4/7] checking fs roots
[5/7] checking only csums items (without verifying data)
[6/7] checking root refs
[7/7] checking quota groups skipped (not enabled on this FS)
found 514161029120 bytes used, no error found
total csum bytes: 496182240
total tree bytes: 1464221696
total fs tree bytes: 813809664
total extent tree bytes: 57655296
btree space waste bytes: 248053148
file data blocks allocated: 4385471590400
referenced 512920408064
btrfs check /dev/nvme0n1p2 4.15s user 1.66s system 62% cpu 9.316 total
I found the manual Can you get on that web site using a laptop?
Can you log in, click on Internet, and take a screenshot (from a laptop)? Make sure to remove your public ip address form the screenshot. In your case it means remove ip addresses that does not start with 192.168.xxx.xxx
Can you access http://10.1.1.1 and log in as described? If so can you take a screenshot over that web site after you log in so we can see what settings are available to tweak? There might be a chance your modem-router will do just fine.
Got excited until I saw Bethesda