#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
set -Eeuo pipefail | |
trap cleanup SIGINT SIGTERM ERR EXIT | |
script_dir=$(cd "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")" &>/dev/null && pwd -P) | |
usage() { | |
cat <<EOF | |
Usage: $(basename "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}") [-h] [-v] [-f] -p param_value arg1 [arg2...] |
# See https://github.com/gui-cs/F7Hisoty which replaces this |
Note
If you want to use pure WSLg, you can try the new WSLg (XWayland) tutorial or the WSLg (Wayland) tutorial.
In this tutorial, we will setup GUI in WSL2, and access it using VNC. No additional software outside WSL (like VcXsrv) is required, except, of course, a VNC Viewer (RealVNC, TightVNC, TigerVNC, UVNC, etc, all of them might work flawlessly).
The key component we need to install is the desktop metapackage you want (GNOME, KDE, Xfce, Budgie, etc) and tigervnc-standalone-server
.
For this setup, I will use Ubuntu (20.04, 22.04 and 24.04 are working), and install GNOME Desktop. Since the key components aren't bound to Ubuntu or GNOME, you can use your favorite distro and GUI. Check the [Sample
$ProgressPreference='SilentlyContinue' | |
Write-Host "Finding OS Architecture: " -ForegroundColor DarkCyan -NoNewline | |
# Find Os Architecture | |
if((Get-ComputerInfo).OsArchitecture -eq "64-bit"){ | |
$arch = "*win64*" | |
Write-Host "64-bit" -ForegroundColor Green | |
}else{ | |
$arch = "*win32*" | |
Write-Host "32-bit" -ForegroundColor Green |
# add this to your .zshrc | |
r-delregion() { | |
if ((REGION_ACTIVE)) then | |
zle kill-region | |
else | |
local widget_name=$1 | |
shift | |
zle $widget_name -- $@ | |
fi |
#!/usr/bin/env python3 | |
import sys | |
import json | |
import subprocess | |
direction=bool(sys.argv[1] == 't' or sys.argv[1] == 'T') | |
swaymsg = subprocess.run(['swaymsg', '-t', 'get_tree'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE) | |
data = json.loads(swaymsg.stdout) | |
current = data["nodes"][1]["current_workspace"] |
Nox, despite being the most feature-filled Android emulator, has a lot of negativity surrounding it due to their antics when it comes to making income off of their program. It is known for running repeated advertisments in the background, calling home and passing along system information (outside of your Android instance) as well as a vast amount of potentially sensitive data in an encrypted payload back to their multitude of servers. With the following preventitive measures, we can stop a majority of this happening as well as greatly improve the overall performance.
-
Download and Install a fresh copy of Nox. The latest version is fine (for now). If you already have it installed, that is fine too. No need to reinstall.
-
Enable Root Mode on Nox by clicking the gear icon and then checking the
Root Startup
box. -
Install a new Launcher from the Play Store. ANYTHING but Nox's default. I suggest [Nova Launcher](https://play.google.com/s