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I feel like with the advent of nearly ubiquitous unlimited mobile data plans (in some parts of the world) a lot less people use public WiFi. However on a plane you have little choice, so it makes sense.
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Nerd, truck driver, and kinda creeped that you’re reading this.
I feel like with the advent of nearly ubiquitous unlimited mobile data plans (in some parts of the world) a lot less people use public WiFi. However on a plane you have little choice, so it makes sense.
Why did they decide to lump in Australia/NZ with Latin America?
What the hell are you talking about?
LineageOS is well past it’s peak days but they support a ton of devices beyond Pixel.
I appreciate the high effort of this answer! People like you really help the fediverse and Lemmy.
The switch is fun to tinker with if you have a hackable one. I wrote a guide on XDA on how to install Android on a Switch. I didn’t actually do any of the hard work to port anything or anything technical, just wrote the guide. I didn’t expect it to become like the guide but it did. I saw it used by Linus Tech Tips once.
I kinda felt bad for never updating it. I dunno if it still is up to date enough to still be useful.
https://xdaforums.com/t/guide-how-to-install-android-on-your-switch-step-by-step.3952300/
My ass with it on watchtower update lmao
Uh I don’t think there was Wifi before that
I just have a wildcard subdomain record. (CNAME: *.mydomain.com)
Then the traffic gets sent to Traefik which checks the request for what subdomain it is asking for and routes it accordingly.
It’s just two label lines in each docker compose with whatever subdomain I want to use and a minute or two later it’s gotten the certificates and it’s available.
That looks pretty cool. I think it’s just that everyone kinda picked their setup at the start and nobody wants to mess with it anymore lol.
I’ve got traefik setup so that I just add a few lines to a docker compose file and I’ll automatically have a new service running under a new subdomain, with SSL certificate and all. Never have to think about it.
I’d say downgrade Mercury to yellow. Licking Mercury won’t hurt you as long as you hold your breath.
Having it close to your breathy parts is always not a great idea though.
Meat-fluids
I think a minimum would be open sourcing the server backend, or at least a compatible one, once servers reach EOL.
In our currently reality this really isn’t a distinction
Don’t move to Arch. It’s a great distro don’t get me wrong but it’s not for someone who isn’t quite familiar with Linux. You need to choose every package on your system and configure it all… Give yourself some time to know Linux.
Ubuntu is a great distro with a great out of box experience. The company behind it though has been making some choices I don’t much care for so I’ve moved away from them. (They created a pretty crappy new packaging system, then started making the old, reliable packaging system use the new one without user consent)
OpenSuSe Tumbleweed is a great option. It has sane defaults, and nice versions of KDE and GNOME (two popular types of desktop environments, I’d recommend KDE if you’re new to Linux - it’s closer to the desktop philosophy you’re used to. GNOME is great too but it’s very opinionated and non-traditional, not for everyone.) It’s also a “rolling release” distro, which means there’s no big releases it just gets updated over time and provides you with very up to date packages. It’s known to be quite stable which is unusual for a rolling-release distro (like Arch, for example).
Fedora is also a great choice - just follow a guide on how to get some media codecs on it (Fedora is big on not including software that isn’t 100% open, but it’s easy to add the few things you’ll need). But it provides a great package manager, great KDE and GNOME versions, and all around very sane and stable. This is a traditional release distro with new versions every 6 months. You’ll still get security and minor software updates between releases.
Whatever you choose, I think you’d be very surprised at what you CAN play under Linux with no problem. Outside of a few games (mostly due to anti-cheat which unfortunately rules out some - but not all - of the more popular multiplayer competitive games) there’s really not much that doesn’t run on Linux already nowadays.
Yes absolutely, and some have this as an advertised feature.
Software quality is great. Very near stock with a few great tweaks. Moto gestures are amazing, I use the chop-flashlight constantly and I know lots of people do too.
The updates suck honestly though. Security updates 1-2 months behind and you’ll get 2 version upgrades… eventually. Edit: their higher end phones get two, reportedly their budget line gets 1 usually…
Still though I like their phones. But as a techy guy I also know I won’t stick with a phone more than 2 years anyhow.
Oh yeah that whole thing is fucking stupid but bypassable depending on model
Hey my inkjet with refillable tanks isn’t so bad
I’ve done that to both arms simultaneously. Geez I hope I don’t gotta get up for an emergency
I feel like it had far less of an expansive library than the GC.