I use Ventoy to boot everything but macOS. Those installers need their own partitions on the SSD.
Humanist, tinkerer, geek, student of life. Starting a new career journey after 25 years in I.T.
I use Ventoy to boot everything but macOS. Those installers need their own partitions on the SSD.
Do yourself a favor and skip the USB drive - they are ridiculously slow compared to a compact external SSD. I found a cheap m.2 enclosure on Amazon and put an old SSD in it and the speed difference is breathtaking.
My SSD has a bunch of Linux distros grouped into folders along with Windows 10 & 11, every macOS from 10.13 to present, along with Rescuezilla, Hiren’s and a few others I can’t remember at the moment.
Rescuezilla was my #1 go-to during my days of distro hopping. Makes it super easy to try out a distro on bare metal instead of a VM.
I am having this exact same problem on my MacBook Air running Ultramarine Linux, a Fedora derivative.
I finally gave up and plugged in a Panda USB Wi-Fi adapter. Not ideal, but it works.
I got tired of fooling around with mine and just plugged in a Panda USB Wi-Fi adapter. It’s ugly, but reliable.
How random. My 2014 MBA with Intel HD Graphics 5000 runs Linux beautifully. What a difference a year makes.
It IS accessible. SVG is a standard format that can be opened by any number of different programs across multiple operating systems.
Just because you chose not to install one of those programs is not my problem.
I don’t get mad when I need to open a pdf but I don’t have a pdf reader. I install a fucking pdf reader.
Get off of your horse, dude.
I suppose that I’m just too lazy after spending tens of hours locating 71 different high resolution logo files, a bunch of different word marks, researching and installing various typefaces, creating layers, groups, precisely aligning and resizing stuff 71 different times, converting all the text into outlines, hiding all the layers, creating a repository, uploading to GitHub, and then offering it to anyone for free.
Inkscape isn’t necessary. Any app that can open SVG files should work.
About a year ago, I trialed both Proton Mail and Tuta mail. Proton mail worked out better for my needs, but YMMV. 
One nice thing about switching providers is that it gives you the opportunity to rid yourself of years of built-up cruft and spam.