- Idk if titles can be updated but consider - chmod 666- Yup, it can be edited. This is not Reddit. :) 
- Done. Thanks! 
 
- You… You wouldn’t actually do this, would you? - @Ging @nutbutter it’s freedom of init system choice! - You’re not wrong, but …jesus what is that homeserver? I’m gonna go clean the coffee off my monitor now - @Ging this was reference to one funny musks post about mastodon few years ago (post was deleted later) 
 Also, mascot is green elephant reference:
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Elephant- After further review, I respect this greatly :D 
 
 
 
 
- Ooh do snap next - And then apt? - There was a mote of an idea floating about a few months back you’ve reminded me of. Basically distrohopping the hard way - start with one distro and install/remove packages until you’ve gotten to another one. - Theseus OS - Starting from lfs? 
 
 
 
- Oh that’s nasty. Yeah, do it! 
 
- No idea what you’re taking about, but I’ll always upvote this picture. 
- Installing Arch with extra steps 
- How does one actually use systemd? I tried making a script to trigger every time I boot up but it didn’t work out for me - This should work. Add a file - /home/username/.config/systemd/user/my_cool_service.servicewith this content:- [Unit] Description=My cool service [Service] Type=oneshot ExecStart=/home/username/my_cool_script.sh [Install] WantedBy=default.target- Now add the script - /home/username/my_cool_script.sh.- #!/bin/bash echo "Hello from my cool script."- Enable and run the service. - $ chmod +x /home/username/my_cool_script.sh $ systemctl --user daemon-reload $ systemctl --user enable my_cool_service.service # Optional: $ systemctl --user start my_cool_service.service $ journalctl -e --user-unit=my_cool_service # You should see the echoed string from the script.- The service should now run every time the user - usernamelogs in.- Oh, thanks! My distro has a package that has a bunch of visual configurations that reset on boot and I wanted to do my configs on top 
 
- Did you set the WantedBy field? - Did you - systemctl enablethe service?
 
- go get em, tiger 
- chmod 640 for the win. 




