

It’s mostly personal preference, but I have grown to hate apt
in general. I used it for over a decade and constantly got in dependency hell. I’ve yet to have anything like that happen on Fedora, especially Silverblue and CoreOS.
It’s mostly personal preference, but I have grown to hate apt
in general. I used it for over a decade and constantly got in dependency hell. I’ve yet to have anything like that happen on Fedora, especially Silverblue and CoreOS.
My pihole exploded yesterday, all my fault. A couple of years ago, I created a script called via cron to update pihole’s services every other week. This was great, until now when it updated to v6 at 4am. To make matters worse, I neglected to automate raspian updates, meaning it was very out of date, and was no longer compatible with pihole-FTL (thinking back, I thought I automated it too, but I guess not).
I took an image after creating a pihole “teleporter” backup, and began formatting. In my lack of caffeine and focus, I missed that my teleporter file was corrupt after I had successfully wiped the SD card. Thankfully I had that image as I was able to mount it and retrieve my blocklists via sqlite, otherwise I would have had to start from scratch.
One good thing that came out of it (for my taste, anyway) was that I swapped the OS on the pi to fedora. No more debian around here!
Tomorrow, I plan on setting up some backup automation for my pi, as it’s the only machine missing backups at this point.
It’s a fork of Mull, in fact!
I’ve had Tuta for years and can’t recall ads… what do you mean?
I’ve only ever had spooled stranded cable (with solid copper strands). It’s very good for making patch cables.
Yep, pretty much. It used to be doable, but these days it’s very difficult. It’s certainly not impossible, but one slipup and you could get on the deny list forever. It’s just not worth it, since emails are usually pretty mission critical, imo.
It should be noted that email servers, no matter the setup, require you to follow strict standards to achieve proper delivery. It’s very easy to get blacklisted, and it’s next to impossible to get off of said blacklist once you’re on it.
I used to host my own mail server with this, but it got to be too much to get my emails to actually send. I was always wondering if my email was actually delivered or if it was silently bounced or sent to spam. Email is the only thing I’m not willing to self host.
These were also in Amazon’s failed “just walk out” store fronts. Ick.
I’m now using Fedora CoreOS which can be deployed from config files. It’s really neat to be able to define everything the way you need it and just start up the VM with no further config necessary. I’m using podman to manage my services.
I want to try it but I’m worried that I’ll get too frustrated and then have (another) expensive keyboard that I don’t use.
I have this level1techs KVM which can drive my 5120x1440 @ 120hz monitor (without DSC) AND my 3840x2160 @ 240hz monitor (also without DSC). It’s $450, but Wendell and level1techs are great and it’s well worth the price.
I’m running Fedora on one host and Ubuntu on the other. With Windows, you can use DSC to drive huge resolutions at 240hz.
They have a doorbell: https://reolink.com/__/product/reolink-video-doorbell/
It doesn’t really get smaller than that.
That’s neat! I had no idea. However:
I’m not overly familiar with the malware situation but I doubt it’s a serious concern
The only virus I’ve ever knowingly been infected with was from a copy of Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit for the PS2.
Someone has serious issues with being wrong. You were the first one to change the subject to say wifi required passwords.
I’m not talking about dishwashers, and only have ever mentioned wifi. I’m talking about how you’re wrong that there can’t be open networks. Don’t change the subject just because you’re wrong. You seem to have an issue with being incorrect. It’s a sad look on you.
Show me where I said anything about a dishwasher. Or defended it in any way. Are you just pissed that you were wrong? That’s pretty pathetic.
Explain the 30+ million open WiFi networks on Wigle if WiFi networks require a password.
"Am I wrong?
No, it is everyone else who is wrong."
You’re the meme. No router has ever required it. Yes, it’s an option. But how do you think open networks exist? Do you think that magically the router will know it’s in a residence and suddenly require a password?
How do you explain the 30 million+ open networks on Wigle? https://wigle.net/stats
I don’t mean to sound hostile, that’s probably my past demons coming out. Like I said in my last comment, it’s really
apt
that I hate. It would constantly break or put me into dependency hell and I haven’t had to deal with that (yet) with Fedora.I haven’t put my finger on it, but Fedora, for whatever reason, also just feels faster.