Yea so, just about most of the apps on the market. Pick a category and once you get through the top apps that are up to date, not far down the list the rest of the apps list their current version and they just get older as you go hence sort by new. There's more outdated apps (I mean by like years) that truly aren't far from the up to date versions
borzthewolf
Gotcha. But what's stopping cyber criminals from seeing these abandoned repos and possibly taking over and implement malware or what not
Good tips, these are exactly what I need. Like which repos do you check out; like github and gitlab?
What about yet another call blocker? Seems that involves more sensitive info obviously
Never looked into that log, I shall give it a shot
Hey I don't even own a thunderbolt cable, so I can always disable that in my bios. But I'm wondering, is there a specific log I should be looking at that would most likely give me some input? Idk which logs are for what and definitely don't know how to filter and manipulate the output to find what I'm looking for, but always willing to learn
Ahh so dmesg pretty much only collects info regarding kernel crashes or whatever? Do they usually retain stuff from the prior day or two? I haven't used my laptop much today, so no new crashes
Thanks a lot. I have a few assumptions just based off what little I could interpret from the logs.... When I check htop for CPU and ram usage, nothing really stands out as abnormal. Of course whichever browser I'm using is always the most ram hungry program. Now if I just did a reinstall of Debian 12, should that hypothetically fix the issue if it is an OS problem (which I believe it may be)?
Well then.... I shall check it out
Right in the middle of a freeze right now, but the cursor still moves and the sound went muted. I'm pretty sure I saw errors before regarding pipe wire, pulseaudio, and I think another related program
Thanks, I've just been doing by the apps version numbers and the last date it was updated