

deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Mostly yes but there are functional differences in convenience. For example the standard upgrade process is completely manual. You have to disable third party repos. You have to change the repos. You have to check if you have space. You have to remove obsolete oackages. And more. On Ubuntu, the software update tool does all that, eliminating a lot of possibility for error. To an exoerienced user, the Debian process is fine. A novice would have plenty of opportunity for frustration and pain.
Oh man, I was like a kid in a candy shop when I got my hands on Flash 4… built quite a few sites with it.
It’s a Framework with 11th gen Intel i5. I’ve never seen it below 11W while doing this. I don’t recall the exact number I got in Debian 12 but I think it was in the 11-13W range. The numbers were similar with Ubuntu LTS which I used till about a year ago. Now I see 9-10W. The screen is 3:2 13". Not sure about the enconding but I have GPU decoding working in Firefox.
It fluctuated between 8.8W and 10.3W.
Err, is it just me or does the Android client stop exchanging DMs in an existing chat if a public key changes? I’ve had to delete conversations between my nodes to reenable comm after regenerating one node’s public key.
You’re in the GTA right? What’s your tag? I’m OO1, OO2, OO3.
I was wondering what would be better for discoverability, to write this in a blog post, on GitHub, then link it here, or to just write it here. Turns out Google’s crawling Lemmy quite actively. This shows up within the first 10-15 results for “USB DAS ZFS”:
It appears that Lemmy is already a good place for writing stuff like this. ☺️
5950X, 64GB
It’s a multipurpose machine, desktop workstation, games, running various servers.
To Gaben’s credit he collects a lot less of the surplus these workers create than most other billionaires. But yes.