The biggest thing is view distance vs size. Your eyes can only see up to a certain density.
https://www.rgb.com/display-size-resolution-and-ideal-viewing-distance
The biggest thing is view distance vs size. Your eyes can only see up to a certain density.
https://www.rgb.com/display-size-resolution-and-ideal-viewing-distance
It shouldn’t unmount those system dirs unless you have a really weird setup or specify with —types.
From the man page:
-a, --all All of the filesystems described in /proc/self/mountinfo (or
in deprecated /etc/mtab) are unmounted, except the proc,
devfs, devpts, sysfs, rpc_pipefs and nfsd filesystems. This
list of the filesystems may be replaced by --types umount
option.
https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man8/umount.8.html
If you are using a system with snap like Ubuntu, it will unmount those since they are technically mounts. It will fail if an app is using the snap but subsequent opens of closed snaps will fail.
Edit: Formatting
Actual X-ray of people who think brains show up in detail on X-rays
If an individual wants to help develop this, how would they go about doing so?
Have you tried Memmy? I’m pretty happy with it
This worked for me: https://askubuntu.com/questions/1523353/windows-aug-13-update-broke-my-ubuntu-system The answer from ‘Ivan Ati’