Good to see a detailed guide. Blocky sounds really interesting. I used pi-hole first and switched to adguard-home for it’s dot/doh features. Blocky could be best of both world’s, but the missing interface is problematic, or isn’t it?
Good to see a detailed guide. Blocky sounds really interesting. I used pi-hole first and switched to adguard-home for it’s dot/doh features. Blocky could be best of both world’s, but the missing interface is problematic, or isn’t it?
I heard there will be a ”windows 365". If windows goes full online like office 365 then the underlining OS could be everything Linux.
What a nice milestone. Congrats to the devs. I tried a lot of IDEs but geany is just simple and perfect.
Using it over years and discovered the expert installer a few months ago. Really good stuff, especially since they decide to build an extra repo for non-free-firmware, because a lot of people ditch Debian when their shitty WiFi doesn’t get recognized immediately after install because it needs a non-free-firmware.
Don’t get me wrong I support Debian, too. I decide to use it at work and we have actually more than 40 systems running on Debian.
Fedora is mostly my choose for client desktop. And I prefer to advice new people to it, just because installing fedora is easier than Debian.
This rolling release thing was just a terrible time in my Linux life. It’s like you are scared of the “you have to start from the ground, erase everything, thing if you want to install win7 or winXP” but the price for a rolling release is a hell of updates every day.
I am done with this annoying updates. Debian has both world’s, the stable side just updates if your security is at risk and the unstable branch is near the same like a rolling release and what Debian calls “unstable” is more stable than any arch-based distro. Btw a change between stable and unstable can be done at every time after install.
I personally prefer fedora because its as stable as Debian but has mostly actual packages like rolling releases. And would be my advice for op. BTW. Try out kinoite. Undestroyable Linux is the hot shit actually.
https://fedoraproject.org/kinoite/
And don’t be scared about not rolling release, a version change is just a big update. Nothing got destroyed like in the good old windows time.
In theory that’s correct. But if you look at the list of progressive changes and contribution. RHEL created a lot of common standards. And we don’t talk about stuff like snap here, we talk about systemd, pipewire etc.
What makes fedora to the devil?
Change Ubuntu to Debian and the list is correct.
PS. And yes, I fucking love to solve captchas. No, I am not a Robot.
I don’t touch my fedora DNS settings because my openwrt router handles DoT for the entire network.
The argument was saving space for other parts. That’s true in a way. But if things needed we should have this space. What’s next? Saving the space of the charger? /s
That’s the reason I bought a set of screwdrivers for apple and there was also the tri-headed included. It was just 5 bucks and I am really happy with them.
Anyway, I just hope they go further in their law like a replacement without any screws. Why not just use the way a laptop battery will be changed? Just click it out easy.
Blackbox has the coloring feature, too.
Teams has a flatpak. Is it shitty, too? And btw. You misunderstand me here, Windows 365 would be a Cloud OS running in whatever (maybe browser), so there will be a use of Teams in the Cloud OS not on the local host.
I know similar use cases. We use for example docker based containers for browsers or libreoffice, they are accessible through domainnames and nobody who surf to this domain has to install these apps.
Edit: we have already Linux clients and It’s so nice to maintain them. I use some ansible playbooks + cockpit and everything runs automatically.
Sounds good to me, I would just deploy linux clients and the end-users can do their “365 cloud stuff” online on it.
What a Linux sysadmin dream, I love it.
Best advice so far.
I work with both, debian and fedora, and if you like flatpaks then stick with fedora.
For your win 10 VM, I prefer the KVM install guide written by the creators of winapps, you might not like winapps but their KVM guide is just awesome:
I use the same, it’s just openboard + the propetary swipe lib
CalDav? Integrated in nextcloud. Or Mailcow. Why does it needs to be integrated with e-mail? Thunderbird is able to add all invitations or reminders into my CalDav Account.
Is this a joke? Manjaro unstable branch sounds like unstably thing to find in the Linux universe.
Go for fedora, it’s the only well known distro with newest software, stable and good community support.