

2·
6 days agosudo nano /etc/fstab
Then replace “defaults” with “compress=zstd” on your desired partitions.
IMO stick with btrfs. Also, the storage space between file systems is exactly the same, given the same hardware.


sudo nano /etc/fstab
Then replace “defaults” with “compress=zstd” on your desired partitions.
IMO stick with btrfs. Also, the storage space between file systems is exactly the same, given the same hardware.
Ubuntu has a history together with amazon, sending search queries in the application starter for example. There are better distros out there, like Mint.
Btop, beautiful and functional.
With use case IMO, you’ll lose absolutely nothing. Literally any game ever now runs on Proton and Wine.
Speech note. Support a whole lot of models and you can even do some voice cloning.


If I understood correctly, it’s free software anyway, so why the discussion?
The fstab file is used to define how disk partitions or remote file systems are mounted into your computer. Removable drives such as USB drives or SD cards are not shown there, because if they were, your system would complain at boot that it can’t find the requested USB drive.
About F2FS having double the storage space of btrfs. In all honesty, it doesn’t make sense to me. Do you mean it shows you potentially being able to store 80 megabytes if you can get compression working or does it just show 80 megabytes instead of 40, after formatting the file system?