

It feels like Bazzite tells you a million times over that you absolutely should not layer packages, it scared me off for sure since I’m new to immutable systems and don’t really know how they work fully.


It feels like Bazzite tells you a million times over that you absolutely should not layer packages, it scared me off for sure since I’m new to immutable systems and don’t really know how they work fully.


Depends what protocols you need?
If you use SMB install the Samba server package. If you use WebDAV install a WebDAV server like SFTPGo, etc…
If you want a google drive like replacement there’s Nextcloud, Owncloud, Seafile, and others.
For the drives themselves you can have traditional RAID with MD, or ZFS for more reliability and neat features, or go with MergerFS + SnapRAID, or just directly mount the disks and store files on some and backup to the others with Restic or something.
Lots of options!


Thats how I describe Jellyfin, it works fine, its just inconvenient to use.


This one is clearly AI, there’s no PCIe card edge on the lower GPU, the fan blade width and spacing isn’t consistent, and the phone camera lens borders have artifacting.


It doesnt graph over time really, it only does it while open and loses the data if you close it.


Here’s an actual answer, a system monitor with historical data: https://beszel.dev/
It’s a webUI but that shouldn’t really matter vs an app with its own GUI.


They do process mapping locally, there’s no reason for a remote connection other than remote control outside your LAN and data collection.
My vacuum running Valetudo works fine with no internet connection, mapping and all.


The most frustrating part of running Linux for me is the experience can vary so much for each person, slight hardware differences can cause odd bugs that other people don’t have, and solving them can be really time consuming because a fix that works for one distro or DE may not work on another.
I’m really happy that Bazzite seems to be gaining so much popularity as an actual windows replacement, because it makes it a lot easier to find fixes for problems if there’s a huge community using the exact same distro.


Might be time to self host vaultwarden if you need real DB features like that.


That’s what backups solve, for important data like a PW DB you should be running daily backups with versioning. Then if anything gets deleted or corrupted you can restore it easily.


I’m just saying it absolutely will do most tasks without issue, since my 3700x doesnt struggle at all with any normal every day task.


I looked up the CPU and its faster than the R7 3700x I game and edit videos on in my desktop…


There’s no guarantee google will scrape and store encrypted messages, plus by not using an encrypted messenger you’re opening up your conversations to everyone else, not just potentially google.


Yeah gotta make sure you never use the same password in multiple places, use a password manager.


It is still keeping the battery warmer which degrades it faster regardless if its being charged or not.


Right? A burrito is $10+ and they wonder why people don’t go there as often.


For normal use like that 16GB is generally just fine. Some games can use enough that you’ll need to close Firefox and other RAM hungry programs though.
As far as needing more than that, people who do heavy design work or edit videos and that kind of thing generally do. For example 32GB running Fusion in Davinci Resolve can be a bit limiting sometimes with higher resolution or 10 bit footage.


Also Thunderbird, but specifically the Betterbird fork.
It works well, its fast, its lightweight (like 100-200MB of RAM), and has lots of features.
I also have my calendar in it.


The difference is I can do something about my downtime and fix it.
I can’t imagine we currently produce enough electricity for every car to be electric.
Plus all the production processes for the cars themselves, and the energy to power them puts off waste heat. Even solar panels benefit from running cooler by having heat removed from them.