You’re thinking of crossover cables, though I’m not sure if those are still necessary.
You’re thinking of crossover cables, though I’m not sure if those are still necessary.
It helps when your opinions become the gold standard
It always throws me off on a fresh install when I can’t sudo
This worked! I’ve got it running on a 4gb SD card so it’s no wonder it ballooned, but once I got apt cleaned up it’s now humming along at 83% usage.
Without thinking or reading to the last paragraph of this article, I went and started a dist-upgrade on my pi.
Curious now to see if it still boots after it’s finished.
Edit: Oops
~ » ssh pihole@172.16.0.1
Last login: Wed Oct 11 09:38:31 2023 from 172.16.0.96
compdump:print:36: write error: no space left on device
compdump:print:42: write error: no space left on device
compdump:print:44: write error: no space left on device
compdump:44: write error: no space left on device
compdump:print:44: write error: no space left on device
compdump:44: write error: no space left on device
I’m not trying to defend Microsoft, but their software isn’t licensed under the GPL so they really aren’t under any obligation to share the source code.
There are alternatives and people can choose to use Microsoft software or not.
Pulling a game from the steam store does not stop people from downloading it if already in their library.
It’s a bit weird to me how, on a post regarding a GNOME update, people feel the need to come out of the woodwork to explain how they prefer to use Plasma or any other DE or WM.
This is Linux, you can use whatever you feel like using. Let people be happy with what they’re happy with.
Smart move, unless you really know what you’re doing and have redundancy. When I first made the switch from Lastpass to Bitwarden I had tried to host the vault myself instead of using the cloud version, which worked fine right up until the moment I had a server outage and lost access to all my passwords.
Moving maximized windows to their own workspace seems like a really cool idea. Workspace management is one of the things I struggle with so I usually just end up with way too many tiled windows on a single screen when they could be moved around more efficiently.
This is problematic because if Plex suffers an outage (which has happened before) users are suddenly unable to sign in. Even if your media server is running fine, through no fault of your own your content becomes inaccessible.
Jellyfin does not have this issue because authentication is handled locally.
However, Plex has too many nice features so I’ll be staying with them for the time being. Credits/intro skipping and Plexamp are a godsend, and the UI is in my opinion way better than what Jellyfin has.
If I’m already running Debian 12, is this something that I have to manually upgrade to or will the security fixes have come in through the repo?
If there was ever a better string of words to get me to watch a video
I was just thinking yesterday when looking at how NixOS works. The config file seems to be quite reminiscent of an Ansible Playbook. I mean maybe I’m way off the mark, I haven’t really dug into Nix much yet.
KathmanGNU