This is what I do as well. I use terraform/tofu and add two entries whenever I add a new domain, one for my external provider and one for my pihole pointing at my internal IP for my home network.
This is what I do as well. I use terraform/tofu and add two entries whenever I add a new domain, one for my external provider and one for my pihole pointing at my internal IP for my home network.
I generally find it to be a family friendly sheen on top of ubuntu so I’ve been installing it for friends and family lately. I would prefer debian based but shrug. They’ll probably get there eventually.
Ive had good success across three non system 76 machines. It is Ubuntu under the covers. I’d expect most of it to work as well as ubuntu does.
Thanks for posting!
Grapheneos and blocked internet for the launcher.
atop, especially because you can take snapshots over time of what the system was doing and use it to backtrack when bad things happen.
Linux has two paste buffers, at least in X and I assume Wayland is the same? . One buffer for ctrl-c/ctrl-v and one for selecting text/middle mouse. ctrl-insert and shift-insert are using the “last mouse selected text” paste buffer.
This is the way.
Awesome I’ve been looking for a newer subsonic client for Ampache. Thank you for your work!
I missed that bait and switch. Thank you for the response.
That’s a fair point. I think you are right that it is not a community project. Something for me to consider. Thanks for the response.
So you think it is bad cause others can’t take their work and make money off of it? Seems to be a real problem in open source right now that others are doing exactly that and something I don’t begrudge a small development team doing.
Not affiliated with them just been using and happily subscribed for a year+ now. Better than Google getting my money.
The user feature is available for non paying users too. If you want a gui for managing that is now behind plus. I don’t see exactly how wantng to make a living off of your work makes you a greedy cunt especially when it seems the features trickle down as they should. Am I missing something?
Nextcloud AIO or all in one. It works relatively well. I run both my own container and an AIO instance and I’ve been pretty happy with it, I’ll likely migrate to it for my docker only one in the near future. Nextcloud AIO
My understanding is:
Passkeys are like a password + 2FA mashed together. If someone steals your “passkey password” they still can’t use it to login without the hardware component. That means phishing is harder. Since passkeys are generated for the user from their hardware it also forces better hygiene on the user by not allowig any password duplication.
A downside is it is tied to hardware and a provider that can cause problems witb loss of device or when you change devices but it is hard to say how painful that is going to be.
[edited for a bit more clarity]
-What does this have to do with OP saying part of the exam had him reciting a manpage effectively?
Edit: I see so they shouldn’t be that way anymore since OP was doing RHEL 5 exams
Wow. Are you serious? Seems like not a great exam…
I find mstrix’s E2E encryption design cumbersome and unintuitive to a point where id just prefer it off.
Other than declutter and conformity (which are good goals in general) what else are you getting here? What would you be able to do tomorrow if they suddenly supported XDG_CONFIG that the general population would benefit from?
Ampache with subsonic for app support.