No, posting to Lemmy from my phone. I used fbgrab to take the shit and used a paste-bin script to post it to 0x0.st
No, posting to Lemmy from my phone. I used fbgrab to take the shit and used a paste-bin script to post it to 0x0.st
Afaik is just tty fonts, using terminus here.
The Gnome browser (epiphany?) is actually quite good. But when I’m on windows I use Zen. On GrapheneOS I use IronFox.
I also recently tested Ladybird. It’s still not usable for daily use, but I’m excited for it.
Do you recommend ucore or ucore-minimal?
So installing looks a bit convoluted. How do you install uCore? Install Silverblue and then rebase to uCore?
Thanks for this. I went down a bit of a rabbit hole today looking into proxmix, and started thinking that a Dell optiplex won’t cut it after reading how using proxmox with zfs uses more resources, plus I kept seeing people recommend ECC ram which is more expensive and is harder to come by.
I’m look at ucore, but most install instructions for things are targeted at debian systems using apt. I guess that’s not a major hurdle though.
Proxmox still peaks my interest, and maybe one-day when I can afford a decent setup I’ll get into it some more.
I followed the installation guide on the website for docker-compose, although I ust replaced the command with podman-compose because I prefer to use podman.
Explain proxmox to me like I’m 5. Is it a VM? I see a bunch of scripts on their website, but i’m confused…
Nevermind, I had an LLM explain it to me. This looks like the go!
Would you run both containers (jellyfin & immich) inside the same VM? or create a separate VM for each service?
I prefer podman over docker. It works, but I wonder if I’m missing out an anything not using docker? I’m still new to containers
I should have mentioned, I prefer to use podman over docker, which apparently doesn’t work with ZFS? At least not the Proxmox VE Podman LXC…
Where do crux users usually connect? IRC?
This is not a Unix like OS, but it does have a shell which can somewhat emulate a UNIX environment.
SculptOS is a microkernel OS capable of strict sandboxing and virtualisation. It could almost be compared to QubesOS in some ways, while it’s package management might be compared to NixOS. Although, neither are anything like SculptOS.
Exactly. No one pays for it because it’s free
Check out Circles
It will. I did the same thing a couple years ago. Make sure you share links to things like articles, videos, news, from the fediverse to your contacts. That helps them switch, when they see the platform in their mobile browser.
SMS is generally free and unlimited with almost any postpaid mobile plan. If you’re still paying for SMS then you should switch providers.
It has to start with someone. I made my entire family switch to signal by boycotting WhatsApp. I just said, of you want to contact me your can either SMS, email or install signal. It was surprisingly easy. For non family members, I tell people to switch all the time. Most of my contacts now use signal. It was worth the trouble.
You still pay for SMS? Wtf, what country do you live in? Most postpaid mobile plans these days only charge for data usage. In which case, your still paying to use WhatsApp.
There benefit would be exactly what this top comment is about. For all those people in your contacts who don’t use signal, you could still use signal to message them, it would just be an SMS message. It would therefore also become more enticing for people to switch from their stock SMS app to signal, because it would make no difference in terms of who you can send SMS messages to. It would allow for the signal user base to grow, solving the issue of “no one uses signal”
No, I don’t encrypt. I am a grown ass man and I rarely take my laptop out of my home. I don’t have any sensitive data on my various machines. I do use secure and encrypted cloud services to store things that I consider a security risk. Everything else is useless to a potential intruder.
I’m old enough to remember a time before YouTube. When YouTube started, it wasn’t about making money. There were no ads. No subscriptions. No sponsors. In the early days of YouTube it was just backyard videos. But it didn’t take long for the connect to start getting good because it was the first of its kind, and everyone started using it. The problem now is, to convince people to use something else that, essentially does the same thing, but doesn’t make people money. Good luck with that.
Money corrupted YouTube. And now, the idea that people can be “content creators” for a living means that there will likely never be a mainstream, ad free, subscription free video platform, where people just make videos in their spare time. Peer tube is cool, but your not going to see high quality, curated content like you get on YouTube. An I think that’s probably a good thing.