

Feel free to indicate the imaginary unit with ‘X’ or some other distinct symbol during your derivations.
Feel free to indicate the imaginary unit with ‘X’ or some other distinct symbol during your derivations.
dpkg doesn’t resolve dependencies (that’s a feature of apt) which means that if you install a Debian package with dpkg, you’ll have to manually install all dependencies first, and they won’t be marked as automatically installed
Usually installing a manually downloaded package and its dependencies works like this:
# dpkg -i package-file.deb
# apt-get -f install
So apt-get can be used to install missing dependencies afterwards while marking them as automatically installed.
According to its German Wikipedia article, the Caspian Sea is called sea and not lake only because of its size and salinity, not because it matches the relevant definitions of a sea.
Unless somebody is scolling through the ‘all’ feed.
Edit: However, in a work environment the user has probably ‘hide content marked as NSFW’ toggled.
Any idea why flatpack doesn’t remove unused (automatically installed) dependencies automatically or at least give a hint, as e.g. apt
does?
Red touches black, friend of Jack.
Red touches yellow, kill a fellow.
They just didn’t know the destination of the S2 yet.
It says ‘run as root’, not installed using root privileges. You’d also need root privilege to dd an image onto a drive either.
27 BC - Auguus became emperor, the end of the republic
395 AD - Division of the Roman empire into a Western and an Eastern half
476 AD - German king Odoaker dethroned West Roman emperor Romulus Augustulus
1204 - Crusaders conquer Constantinople
1453 - the Ottomans conquered Constantinople, the end of theEast Roman empire
1806 - Emperor Franz II denounced the end of the Holy Roman Empire of German Nation
1917 - The end of the Russian empire (3rd Rome)
Also, Mussolini tried to wean Italians off of spaghetti as part of his futurist and autarkist dreams.
We know how he ended.
Makes sense. I’ve always wondered where the name is coming from.
I didn’t know the MG 42 is that old.
We already have nuclear participation with the US. In case NATO decides for mutual nuclear defense, the US nuclear bombs stored in Germany exclusively for German use would be attached to airplanes of the German Air Force to be deployed onto their targets.
Sure, but as I understood, the question was how to do that “properly” with dpkg and apt-get, i.e. without the ‘new’ apt script.