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-rw-r--r-- | blog/route.md | 7 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/blog/route.md b/blog/route.md index 3f6d0cb..b0c6aa9 100644 --- a/blog/route.md +++ b/blog/route.md @@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ certain essential features like PCIe (for NVMe) has yet to reached a mainline Linux release, even worse so on the BSDs. I ended up flashing the _only_ distribution with official support [at the time][goatse], Ubuntu. -Funny enough, after over a decade of daily driving GNU, twas the first time +Funny enough, after over a decade of daily driving [GNU], twas the first time I installed Ubuntu on a machine of my own. At the time of writing, the reason for the was more apparent than ever: Canonical had been forcing Snap[^snap] down the users' throat, even on the _server_ edition. @@ -145,8 +145,8 @@ ufw allow in on br0 to any port 68 proto udp Thanks to systemd, the Wi-Fi dongle is recognized as wlx600dd0g8b33f. Yes, that abomination of a name includes the chip's full MAC address. That being said, I'd like to stick to the basis of a systemd/Linux distro. -Even though Netplan doesn't support Wi-Fi hotspot with systemd-networkd -but NetworkManager, so the interface had thus to be declared as Ethernet: +Netplan doesn't support Wi-Fi hotspot with systemd-networkd but NetworkManager, +so the interface had thus to be declared as Ethernet: ```yaml network: @@ -227,6 +227,7 @@ people over, especially not for looking at _their_ electronic devices. [upstreamed]: https://rvspace.org/en/project/JH7110_Upstream_Plan [goatse]: https://loa.loang.net/chung/D16T24MXDP3T.3BR1X04I90CGT@guix/t +[GNU]: https://www.gnu.org [Netplan]: https://netplan.io [ufw]: https://launchpad.net/ufw [loang network]: https://loang.net |