Update only archlinux-keyring and try again.
# pacman -S archlinux-keyring
# pacman -Syu
In some cases you may need to re-populate the keyring.
# pacman-key --init
# pacman-key --populate
Update only archlinux-keyring and try again.
# pacman -S archlinux-keyring
# pacman -Syu
In some cases you may need to re-populate the keyring.
# pacman-key --init
# pacman-key --populate
Adding to this: individual package updates are not supported. Always update your whole system, unless you know what you are doing.
TL;DR:
The problem is growing leafy plants like lettuce and spinach in space can come with a side dish of bacteria, according to a new study from a team at the University of Delaware. In tests on plants grown in simulated microgravity, they were shown to actually be more susceptible than normal to the Salmonella enterica pathogen.
For your first point you’d probably want to investigate why your system doesn’t suspend or what exactly is going on. You could check logind.conf, specifically the HandleLidSwitch* keys. Otherwise, your lid switch should have a corresponding /dev/input/ event that you could maybe listen to or something.
I can’t offer much input on your second point. I think unplugging the audio jack should probably trigger a udev event that you could write a rule for. No idea about wireplumber though.
I’m pretty sure Solus is a Linux based OS, at least according to Wikipedia:
Solus (previously known as Evolve OS) is an independently developed operating system for the x86-64 architecture based on the Linux kernel and a choice of Budgie, GNOME, MATE or KDE Plasma as the desktop environment.
As a bread enjoyer, I’m intrigued. Would you like to elaborate a bit? All I can find is different types of bread (like different flour, shape etc.).
As someone who has never thought about YouTube video IDs: is that a thing? Is there a small but tightly knit community of youtube video ID connoisseurs?
There’s also Ctrl+delete which deletes the word after the cursor.
Then maybe the downloaded packages are actually corrupted. You could check if they have plausible file sizes. IIRC pacman will ask you if you want to delete the non-matching files but I’m not entirely sure. They should end up in
/var/cache/pacman/pkg
.