I’d trust also the official Arch repo.
Yeah they’ve only rolled out a version of curl that broke the package manager a few times.
I’d trust also the official Arch repo.
Yeah they’ve only rolled out a version of curl that broke the package manager a few times.
I may be a touch biased, but I feel like you might enjoy trying Gentoo one day, especially with the recent official binary package host.
there is no good answer
There is clearly a worst option.
I use Traefik for all of my containerised services. It’s fantastic.
I’m sorry, but no. PluralKit only really impacts a tiny minority of the userbase to begin with. It isn’t enough to cause people outside that group to choose the platform, nor is it enough for people outside of that minority to avoid moving to whatever the next big thing is.
That’s the point.
IRC is fine, so are mailing lists; I use both, plus various git forges, to contribute to open source projects.
IRC is still going strong on OFTC and Libera.chat
I get that the younger folks like discord, but seriously it’s a proprietary mess that locks everything behind a wall and tries to extract payment from each and every user.
It may or may not work, unfortunately.
I successfully ran 2x32GB in a Dell XPS 15 that “didn’t support” it, because the larger DIMMs didn’t exist at the time it was designed and documentation was done up.
It’s not going to hurt to try, but if you have two DIMM slots it’s worth a shot; the slots are already wired up to address lines! Maybe try with one first?
Edit: the CPU specs say that it supports 64GB and only up to two memory channels. It’s looking pretty good on that end.
/me whispers “a well regulated militia”
I’m not worried about that 😎
You should be. Your name will be associated with abuse forevermore.
The admins can tell me what’s the frequency/number they’re comfortable w/ and I can reconfigure the solution.
Or you can set some sane defaults and a timeout period. 1 request / 5 mins is fine to check if something is online and responding.
I run Linux at work in a mostly MS shop.
You need to use Chrome/Chromium/Edge for the PWA to work; Firefox doesn’t work with it for now.
Just do that, load the PWA, say a 100 'Fuck M$'s, and move on with your life.
BareOS is a great open source option. The GUI is a webUI but you also have a powerful console on the shell if you need to script.
I have a multi-WAN configuration on my router, with ipv6 VDSL then ipv4 VDSL then a prepaid 4G modem as the backup link. I rarely fail over but it’s been fantastic watching traffic stats when it does.
My only downside is the CGNAT on that connection that prevents things like a backup VPN gateway…
Simply refuting the BS claim that it’s impossible for there to be a Linux virus.
This one existed, therefore the claim is false.
There are still no viruses for Linux … because it’s not possible.
Here is just one example that proves your assertion wrong.
for everyday use … hektograms and the like are more common
[citation needed]
I wrote some TypeScript modules to process a bunch of documentation in markdown to a ton of output formats via pandoc + latex.
No real reason for it, except that I was able to start with the export module of a node-based thing written in JavaScript and iterate from there until I had a working system in CI/CD.
Oh hey.
I’ve done this in a ton of different ways.
Manually, viis GitLab CI/CD, CI/CD with Kaniko.
My current favourite though is Kubler; I did a write-up for Lemmy a little while ago: https://lemmy.srcfiles.zip/post/32334
What a hot take. I bet you’re real fun at parties.