Could also try a Sharp Memory LCD. Faster refresh rates and pretty low power consumption depending on usage pattern. Here's an article of someone using it with an ESP32: https://hackaday.com/2020/01/07/how-low-can-an-esp32-go/
One can only ever use Symbols as keys in the 1.9 hash literal syntax, whereas complex objects responding to `#hash` can be used as keys in hash rocket literals.
You can use the mouse wheel to scroll and highlight to copy. I think you are specifically trying to say the mouse highlight won't go past one window though, right?
I knew I saw a way to interact with it through the mouse. Thank you for reminding me. `tmux` is really a neatly little program, everything is there, simple and efficient.
ps:
man tmux | grep "mouse-" # shows the mouse related options
C-b : "set mouse-<option> on"
pps: turning on mouse windows/panels interactions disable text selection, do you know a way to have both ? (beside switching beside custom defined modes on your .conf)
You can always do text selection in a terminal by holding shift while selecting the text, no matter if the program running in the terminal supports mouse or not. I think on some terminals it's alt instead of shift.
It's the starter-kit Walmart hobbyism. I can buy a bike at Walmart for ~$100. The bike will get me to where I want to go with reasonably light usage. Anything outside the first time, light usage model is a ever deepening pool of cost/value.
Walmart is great if I'm poor and my son needs a bike that he can crash (since he's just learning) and he will grow out of in the next 2 years; he probably couldn't put enough miles on the bike to break it within then.
If I want a bike to ride five miles to work everyday, I'm looking at $500 (used) to $1500 for something nice and dependable.
The Walmart model isn't bad as long as everybody understands the metrics involved.
"Portable roaster ovens" can fit an OK sized bird and are just a bit more expensive than a good crock pot. Completely worth it to have your oven available on a busy holiday. That way you can set the turkey for any temp you want and vary your actual oven with the sets of things that cook quicker.
The only thing: they are pretty hot and could be a safety concern if not at counter height.
Turning off secure boot is only required for x86 and the actual article (at mjg59.dreamwidth.org) says "in case you don't want to fiddle with firmware settings."
So for Arm you would still need a signed boot loader.
I decided against that "solution" when Facebook took it upon themselves to promote their @facebook.com contact information over whatever users had previously setup.
http://wicswac.org/whyday.html