Similar here: Red Hat 6 > Ubuntu > Debian > Fedora Silverblue
Similar here: Red Hat 6 > Ubuntu > Debian > Fedora Silverblue
As a Tailscale user, I don’t understand how it helps with torrenting–don’t you typically control all the nodes? Or is there some way to configure a third party exit node?
Fedora Silverblue because I seem to break any system I have eventually, and this one’s still going.
Is that still the case if you use it in a flatpak e.g., Bottles?
I’ve used I2P for torrents and it’s fine. There’s plenty of popular stuff on Postman. The speeds are slower partly to the network but partly due to number of seeders, so I encourage everyone to get on there. Just be patient and there’s no problem.
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There are several ways around it. If you are self hosting for a small trusted group, or just yourself, you can use Tailscale.
You can install a Proxmox virtualisation cluster, a popular (the most popular?) option for self-hosting services. All nodes in the cluster are visible in a single web interface. For additional system coordination, you can set up High Availability and clustered file systems that the nodes can share.
Ooooo, a ruling
I reckon that mantle should go to Fedora Silverblue over Fedora Workstation.
Where I live it’s up to the landlord to dispute the return of the government-held bond and prove their case to the tribunal. If they do not dispute within two weeks after the tenant claims it, or are unsuccessful in proving damage, the government automatically releases the bond back to the tenant.
How much critical thinking is going on in a supermarket? Anyway, the tall ones also warm faster 😡
Kali, also called Kalika, is a major goddess in Hinduism, primarily associated with time, death and destruction.
All operating systems suck, some just suck harder than others.
Indeed it is difficult to hammer it in to shape. In addition, Microsoft will often quietly reset setting back in their favour. It’s that constant fight that tipped the scales for me.
My main issue with Windows isn’t its technology, but its attitude. The user is no longer the most important consideration. In that way it’s become adversarial.
On my kid’s laptop I was holding Windows 11 24H2 back because of Recall, but this week it just decided to install itself. Now it’s a Linux laptop.
After switching to Silverblue a couple years ago I’ve used dnf, like, three times maybe. I find rpm-ostree even simpler than apt since it’s easy to tell what additional packages I’ve installed, it’s trivial to remove them, and I’ve never had a dependency issue.
You’re already funneling it through a third party, so why not encrypt it (with bonus location spoofing)?
Classic “it works on my machine”. When people have GPU driver issues, it’s almost always NVIDIA.