Theoretically cryptocurrencies are interesting, but Bitcoin just isn’t usable.
Bitcoin and many other currencies have way too many and large fluctuations in value for daily use.
Bitcoin specifically is not practical for transactions in general due to cost and block size limits. Yes, lightning exists, but maybe your technology is shit if it needs a second overlay network to function.
Instead of fixing those issues, most other coins are just pump and dump schemes for a quick buck.
Only very few coins try to do something different and fix some of these issues.
Get a cheap VPS and set up a VPN of your choice.
Yggdrasil :)
Open UDP ports are pretty secure and rarely found by scanners. The basic issue with scanning for UDP is, that most services don’t respond to random garbage you try to probe then with. Without getting a response back, the scanner has no way of knowing if there is something running on that port or not.
Wireguard in particular only responds if the correct key is given.
Also make sure your firewall DROPs (usually the default, but do check) disallowed connections instead of REJECT. This way any UDP probing, whether it’s to an open port or closed one just times out with no way for the scanner to distinguish them.
I don’t know of any project that already supports that AI processor. You’d still be using the CPU and GPU at the moment.
What happened in Gnome for them to merge so much stuff recently?
Is that a standard systemd configuration or something enabled by a distro?
I can really recommend XCP-ng. For me it strikes a pretty good balance of features and ease of use.
Using whatever works better for the current project is doing Hybrid Cloud. Now your boss can brag about how modern the infrastructure is.
And 2d, who self host on a server/VPS they rented somewhere.
Wifi works now, the wiki is out of date.
However, the Pinetab 2 does not have the screen layer for stylus support. See the FAQ
Your best bet is anything Wacom as they have their own driver in Linux. Alternatively OpenTabletDriver supports some other tablets as well https://opentabletdriver.net/Tablets.
Or the DIGImend kernel driver http://digimend.github.io/drivers/digimend/tablets/
It also breaks with more than one monitor on Wayland, might also be related to the scaling thing though.
deleted by creator
In my experience setting environment variables is pretty inconsistent. The easiest way would be using /etc/environment. This sets stuff globally for all users and definitely works.
PAM also used to support a per-user environment file, but that’s deprecated or removed even. The best you can do for per-user config is setting variables both in your login shell and the systemd user environments file.
Or Wayland, where this isn’t an issue.
You can install Wireguard or another VPN to encrypt your traffic to the VPS.
Set ‘blendos-base’ in your system.yaml, install additional packages, update and reboot.
I already learnt of blendOS two weeks ago, I think in a discussion of immutable distros.
Really looking forward to play around with it some more and maybe replace my Arch install with this.
BTW, I did fix the error. Turns out I was in a public network and the rule only applied to domain networks.
Also these fucking rules don’t show in the usual GUI, you have to look into the registry.
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Services\SharedAccess\Parameters\FirewallPolicy\Mdm\FirewallRules
Reddit post for rule source