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A little 90’s comedy bit your comment made me think of.
Everything from the chanel -> History Time. Pete Kelly is an awesome story teller and works really hard on making in depth historical documentaries, some three hours long.
Check out testdisk file recovery.
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George Carlin, live at the Paramount 1992 a special for HBO if I remember correctly.
I pray to Joe Pesci, because he looks like a guy that can get things done!
I’ve been using the same pocket knife for about 15 years. Part of my EDC.
I love when his mom fires up the blender and when stripe rewires Mrs. Deagle’s stair climber.
8/10 Christmas rating.
I totally get it but KVM/qumu is really awesome. Well worth the setup time IMHO.
python fSociety.py
Back in the day I used to watch NixieDoesLinux.
It’s strange to me how everyone’s experiences with manjaro is different. I’ve been running it on two laptops for 2 1/2 years without issue. On one of the laptops I’m purposefully trying to break it by not giving it updates in a timely manor. I’ve gone 2 months without updating and still can’t break it.
Honestly I wish it would finally break. Just using it for a media server/player now. I need to take it off the rolling release distros and put it on something requiring allot less manditory maintenance. It just won’t die though and I’m too lazy to fix something that isn’t broken.
No shade or manjaro fanboy bs intended as I believe everyone has different experiences with different OS’s and different needs that can be met or failed by any OS. I’m also weaning myself toward a full arch install by using distros closer to a full arch experiance on my new laptop.
My failure OS was Endeavour. Following Arch wiiki and assuming I had mkinitcpio bricking initramfs rebuild. At least I think that was the issue if I’m remembering right, been about a year. Obviously operator error in my case and no shade to EOS.
Tried out Garuda on the new laptop and have been pretty happy. As with anything there are issues to overcome. Like OBS not working because of some dependencies required by Garuda native apps for nvidia. I think this will push me to finally do a full arch install soon and roll back my other 2 laptops running manjaro to Debian.
The progression of my Linux experience over the last 15 years has been happiness to dissatisfaction with every distro I’ve tried. Not because the distros were bad but they mostly had some limitations I wanted to overcome.
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Right now I’m using Garuda Linux, it takes a snapshot during major updates. Easily restored if something breaks.
Time shift saved my but a time or two in the past.
I hope that this link can help save your data. You might need an external HD to recover the data to as well as a live USB you can install testdisk to.
https://www.howtogeek.com/700310/how-to-recover-deleted-files-on-linux-with-testdisk/
Here is a video and there are plenty more on YouTube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jbWfGePrqo&t=0
Maybe you can get an extetion from your professorto buy yourself a bit more time to recover your data? Best of luck.
Just to piggyback back off this, when windows is installed on the same HD as your grub is installed windows can and in my experience eventually will over write your grub preventing you from booting into your Linux partition.
This forces you to boot from live USB like bootrepair or chroot and reinstall grub. This can be a slightly complicated process if you have encrypted your Linux partition with luks.
Best practice is to install each OS on their own HD and not to install grub on your windows HD. At least that’s my experience over the last 15 years.
A great alternative to dual booting is installing windows to a KVM/qemu virtual machine. You can do this from virtmanager’s GUI. See your distro help pages for instructions for setting it up.
This might help.
https://www.tecmint.com/clear-ram-memory-cache-buffer-and-swap-space-on-linux/
You could write a simple bash script to get memory and compare it to your desired memory usage then clear memory when desired usage has been exceeded. Then set your script as a cronjob.
Or you can just setup a cronjob to clear memory at a set interval in a cronjob described in the link.