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Posts
10
Comments
147
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Lots of good advice in here, so I won’t repeat most of it.

    One thing that I didn’t see anyone cover is how to tell a culture is “healthy”. My recommendation for this is to use a container that you can add graduation marks to. Put some lines on it to indicate volume. Then when you feed your culture, keep track of what volume you have in flower/water. Then watch the starter volume over time. People often say: feed every x_time. In my experience it’s far more important to time the feedings based on the activity. Once you do this for a short while in your specific environment, you will get a feel for how often you need to feed. My house “room temp” varies quite wildly across my seasons. So I have to feed more in the summertime, and less in the winter.

    Your mileage may vary.

  • That sounds pretty slick. I envy your scripting prowess. You really have to know your system top to bottom to be able to boil it all down like that.

    I’m just beginning my journey into this whole space, and it’s really interesting how many different ways people have to deal with the same basic things.

    I’m also incredibly lazy, so maybe more scripting is in my future! Thanks for taking the time to write such a detailed reply!

  • Ah, that's what I was looking for. Thank you. I am not sure if an MQTT signal works well for dimming, but I guess I'll give it a try, because otherwise I end up with two switches controlling the same set of lights in the same location... not idea.

    Thanks!

  • That’s what I was worried about. I’ll leave it be for now. If I do end up distro hopping, I’ll probably try out something I never have.

    Honestly, it seems to me that there are far more tangible differences between desktop environments than actual distros.

  • What are the actual differences between Ubuntu mint and Debian Mint? I’ve been using the former for a while now, but I just started exploring plain Debian (and kinda loving it). All this talk about Debian Mint is making me get the distro itchy foot.

  • It looks like libinput-gestures is similar to touchegg/touché in the sense that it only adds support for 3 or 4 finger gestures. It looks like 2 finger gestures are supposed to be supported by your DE or are app specific.

    Thanks for the reply!

  • I would love to run gnome/wayland, but my Chromebook is about a decade old, and it was a cheapo from the start. It only has 2GB ram, so I’m running as light as I can. Unless there is a way to put wayland on xfce, I might be stuck. I appreciate the reply!

  • Interesting! Looks pretty slick. Might be a nice stepping stone into that world. This chromebook is so old that it could be a perfect playground for this sorta thing. I don’t have any important files/apps or anything on it that I’m afraid of damaging or being without. Thanks for the suggestion.

  • After some serious googling, it looks like gestures is a feature that really only exists in the "luxury" DEs. There is something called Touchegg and Touche that can add them to others, but I'm not far along enough to know if it will do what I want it to.

    I just tried debian with Xfce, and it's pretty fast, but I REALLY love using gestures! It makes my tiny screen feel way bigger.

  • Yeah, you don't have to remove it (I didn't when I tried this 10 years ago) but if you don't you always have to hit ctrl+l when it boots, or it could get stuck looking for ChromeOS. The hardware is so old now, I don't really care if I brick it. I'm just learning about linux by goofin.