Today I learned
history -c
…
Won’t be forgetting that one in a hurry! (It clears your history file in Bash)
Today I learned
history -c
…
Won’t be forgetting that one in a hurry! (It clears your history file in Bash)
Sadly, a 2018 laptop struggles to continually re-compile software for a “minimal” system… Hmm.
Prepare for confusion…
Standard “nobody” user/group in CRUX:
$ cat /etc/passwd | grep ^no nobody:x:99:99:nobody:/: $ cat /etc/group | grep ^no nobody::99:
Normally (I believe), the group “nogroup” is the corresponding group for the user “nobody”.
Having the group called “nobody” might affect functionality.For instance, slock expects “nogroup” to be the group name. “nogroup” is also the default group name in Devuan, and its ID (65534) also corresponds to the BSD norms. CRUX’s appears to align with Red Hat’s preferred UID/GID (99).
In this example, “nobody” (the user) is also not a member of the “nobody” group. I’m not sure if it should be, or not. I guess not, otherwise you’re giving “nobody” something of an identity by assigning it (them?!) to a group. Again, comparing Devuan, nogroup does not have any members, so this seems normal.
Just the name question, then. I’ll probably put this to the mailing list…
Source: Homebrew Website Club Europe/London | November 26, 2025 | IndieWeb Events
Enjoying my first homebrew online meetup

Why, oh why, is it that when I go to ‘chown’ something recursively, I always forget to put -R before typing the owner:group?
Every week when I put out the recycling for collection, I genuinely worry for my future health.
The rest of the week, it’s just a party – yeehaa! 😳
Back when I was at school, the word “here” actually existed. What is the modern equivalent?

I really, really wish, that when people talk about “4K”, they would instead talk about “UHD”.
4K == 4096×2304
UHD == 3840×2160
You have a UHD TV/Monitor. Sorry.
Linux is so powerful, sometimes I wonder how it can possibly juggle some serious I/O with such limited resources (Core i7 2640M, 16GB).

Funny that we call them “SSL Certificates”, when we no longer use #SSL. #TLS #websecurity #crypto