

In Steam’s settings you can add a new library folder on the larger drive. The compatdata will install to the same library folder that the games are installed on. You’d have to move the games to the new drive as well. That’s the simplest way to do it


In Steam’s settings you can add a new library folder on the larger drive. The compatdata will install to the same library folder that the games are installed on. You’d have to move the games to the new drive as well. That’s the simplest way to do it
My Dad convinced me to try it, as a way to learn more about how computers work (ie without Windows). I installed Ubuntu and didn’t like GNOME, but once I saw that all the same programs I used on Windows were still available on Linux, I knew it was worth finding the right distro. I used Linux Mint for awhile because Cinnamon DE was nice, but eventually I needed a more up to date version of something (I can’t remember what) so I installed Arch with KDE instead. I’ve used it ever since.


It’s the playlist link that’s the problem. It ends with playlist?list=LM which stands for “Liked Music”. The downloader doesn’t know your account’s liked music playlist. It needs a playlist ID like playlist?list=PLO7q4X25LQEEyJAQe5EEwJxUCSKvuKbok
Basically you need the songs to be in a different playlist


I did some testing, it looks like the auto generated “Liked Music” playlist doesn’t have a proper URL that can point to the music.
A workaround seems to be adding the playlist to the queue, then saving the queue to a new playlist, and using that new playlist URL.
That way you can remove the “music.” part from the “music.youtube.com” and use it like a regular YouTube playlist.
If that doesn’t work for you it might be a DRM issue with how your phone is attempting to download the data. I used my desktop.


You can use yt-dlp with the -x flag to extract the audio with the link to the playlist. You can specify the audio format too, it’s a powerful tool.
yt-dlp -x link_to_playlist
Is there a difference when sharing the whole screen versus sharing only a single window?
You could use a virtual camera like the one included in OBS to share your screen with the cursor showing, but that probably won’t share desktop audio by default.


The prequels were made with the idea in mind that people had seen the originals, and after they saw the prequels, they would watch it in Prequel->OT order.
The correct way to watch Star Wars if you’ve never seen it before is Original Trilogy, then Prequel Trilogy.


I do this for fun while waiting for things to load
Arch because I like getting the latest releases of packages


The open source kernel drivers will work. If you want to bother installing their proprietary drivers, I’d recommend reading the Arch Wiki, but you may need to do some things differently even though EndeavorOS is Arch-based.
From the wiki: “Most users do not need these proprietary drivers.”
Sounds like it might be more of a DE problem than a distro problem. I’d recommend trying KDE Plasma if you haven’t already.