nvm a restart fixed it this happend due to accidentally holding down the down arrow for about 40 minutes. anyone know what on earth is happening here?

also how does one stop the rapid mitosis of fedora’s in grub, they keep multiplying

  • @[email protected]
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    412 months ago

    Did you replace your BIOS with Minecraft’s texture files? Classic mistake, I’ve done it a dozen times! /s

  • Strit
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    412 months ago

    Can you replicate it? If you can, you can create a bug report. If not, it’s probably a one-time thing where the stars alligned and the conditions where just right for it to happen.

  • @[email protected]
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    192 months ago

    This is GRUB’s final warning before you dig too deep in the OS list. Never hold ⬇️ for more than 45 minutes. If you do, make sure you have punch tape with a bootloader available or you’ll have to manually enter machine code instructions to get your computer back up.

  • lemmyng
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    162 months ago

    rapid mitosis

    As in you are seeing multiple boot entries? It’s likely one entry per kernel version that you have installed. It doesn’t happen often these days any more, but in some situations it’s handy to be able to revert to a previous kernel if for example third party modules break.

    • @WILSOOONOP
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      72 months ago

      its per fedora version for some reason, and i dont think that such a fallback would even work since fedora removes the previous kernel core and most other garbadge from what ive seen

      • @[email protected]
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        2 months ago

        I don’t know about Fedora, but Debian keeps at least the previous version. However, that’s about it. There remain only 4 (2 normal + 2 recovery) GRUB entries and the additional ones vanish automatically during the uninstallation procedure.

  • @muhyb
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    102 months ago

    Nice software gore

  • Hubi
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    82 months ago

    That looks like RAM corruption to me.

  • @[email protected]
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    32 months ago

    I had an old laptop do this some years ago and it was because the graphics card was broken. I had dual graphic card and found a way to disable the broken one in bios (dedicated one, could continue on intel graphics) but the computer was too old to reliably use much longer and it died even more a few months later.

    • @WILSOOONOP
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      12 months ago

      This one isstill perfectly fine, just has the brain damage of an nvida card