There are licenses that allow for free non-commercial/personal use but paid business use.
There are licenses that allow for free non-commercial/personal use but paid business use.
Start with running something in docker. Probably get containous/whoami
running, then portainer
, then either traefik
or caddy
.
Once you’ve got that all working, you can run anything you want easily.
If you’ve got an old machine lying around, you can use that to start.
You don’t need a special client, just a browser. Otherwise, yep!
If you’re carrying your media with you, you could run Jellyfin on the server to provide access to the media to anyone connected to its wifi.
Check out MXRoute. (Specifically the lifetime promo, though I’ve seen it on sale for cheaper.)
You could dual boot and find out. Or even do a live session and play around.
Check out Discord’s Webhooks; many applications publish notifications through them. Should be as easy as sending a message to a specific URL, I think.
I highly recommend taking the time to learn docker instead of running directly.
So I’d have to rebuild the kernel, not just provide a kernel argument? That’s definitely not a step I’m ready for.
While I believe you, I haven’t been able to enable hibernation with it on.
You have to turn off Secure Boot to enable hibernation, and I value hibernation enough to do so.
No longer being able to run Windows 7, the pinnacle of Windows.
I mean, how else are you going to do a speed test?
This. OP clearly found a theme that works for them.
Ah, thanks! I knew it was somewhere.
Is that where all the government computers run Ubuntu?
What is it?
Sorry, you may be right; I was just thinking of licensing in general.