If he has unlimited he could use SimpleLogin aliases in the future
If he has unlimited he could use SimpleLogin aliases in the future
I guess you could also Mount a tmpfs to that directory
Thanks for the response. Seems like I made a good choice by going with the AGPL
I hate the company but I haven’t found another streaming service with a similar amount of music, sound quality and algorithm. I have a jellyfin instance, but it lacks the choice and algorithm.
Edit: I am currently in the process of switching to Tidal. It has pretty much all the niche artists that I usually listen to, the algo is pretty good (at least thats what other ppl say), the audio quality is very good and it has a really nice UI. Also, it pays Artists twice as much as Spotify.
It doesn’t have a native App for Linux, but there is https://github.com/Mastermindzh/tidal-hifi, which is an electron wrapper for the web-ui that is also available via Flatpak and works well so far.
Dumb question because I’m not fluent in License-Lore: which license would be best at preventing others (or me from the future) from selling / closing down the licensed work? Would it be GPL, AGPL, MPL, something else?
Only one room?
*******
that’s what I see
Codeberg is awesome, it’s just like github but open source and self-hostable (forgejo)
Waltuh
…like the Seine
Is this really a major story?
No, it’s a Mayor story
That’s the neat part: you don’t have to take the icky parts. Just use artix instead of arch to not use systemd
Could’ve just run a benchmark or mine monero or something… A Minecraft server is arguably one of the worst ways to test performance
Well then don’t click this (nsfw i guess)
Debain on servers because it just works.
Arch on desktops because you got basically every software package you’d ever need in the AUR and it’s somewhat stable.
If you need another thing to do, you could try to make your opnsense HA and never have your internet stop working while rebooting a node. It’s pretty simple to set up, you might finish it in 1-2 evenings. Happy clustering!
I know, but every time I had to do that it felt like it’s a jank solution. If you have a raspberry pi or smth like that you can also set it up as a qdevice.
…and if you’re completely fine with how it is you can also just leave it like it is
If you update your OS, it could happen that a changed dependency breaks your app. This wouldn’t happen with docker, as every dependency is shipped with the application in the container.