I wasted a few hours, trying to make some flatpak apps do as I wanted, before I understood how flatpaks works, and why they are not always a good solution.
Linux
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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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Probably trying to share a Stream drive between Linux and Windows. Trying to run games from NTFS just didn't work and resulted in all kinds of weird issues. I was close to giving up on Linux but after I switched to an ext3 partition things just started working :|
back around 2013 I was working on a school project, did the ol' get out my laptop without putting on my glasses bit, and ran "rm -rf" on the wrong folder because the characters sorta looked similar to my farsighted eyes.
Since I didn't make backups, that was a few weeks of work down the drain.
That is a process fail, not a Linux fail. It wouldn't matter if it was Linux or absolutely anything else.
Sure, but I wanted to ask fellow Linux users
Your title is '...in using Linux'. My point is simply it has nothing to do with Linux, and it's also posted in the Linux sub.
Not costly in anything but time, but I tried to crossgrade an i386 server to x86_64. Eventually it got broken enough that I restored from a backup and just rebuilt a new server from scratch in a VM to replace it.
I tried to enroll secure boot without understanding what I'm doing. I locked myself out of the motherboard.
Also when you accidentally create a directory called '~' the command rm -r ~
is not the right one...
I installed some library from sources on my working laptop, and it stopped booting lol. Had to change my laptop for the newer Thinkpad, because you cannot insert into working devices any flash drives to boot from and fix the system. It hasn't cost me anything, but was pretty funny
Upgrade my PC. I put new parts in but I dont notice any real gains because my system was already running well.
My most costly mistake was probably installing gentoo on a Chromebook. That took so long and was both fun and extremely frustrating. It was working but now I'm getting these weird drive errors because the entire thing is loaded on an SD to avoid using the Chromebooks 15gb internal storage.
Buying a Framework 16. Never again.
Why? If nothing else, don't they hold their value really well?
Once I had to buy a new keyboard for all the goddamn terminal typing I had to do