If you’re happy with Racknerd, they have deals on LEB all the time. Right now, even
If you’re happy with Racknerd, they have deals on LEB all the time. Right now, even
FYI: Flatpaks can share some dependencies and duplicate files.
Yes, but by editing config files 😐
Hopefully the team has smartened up a bit since these days
Oh good, it’s not just me with weird freezing problems. I often see individual windows hang for a good while as well, and then KWin just restarts in place.
Can you provide examples of such in this video?
What makes Debian a pain to use on servers?
$10-20 is what that VPS costs at a cloud provider. You could also dockerize and use a container service like GCP Cloud Run combined with cloud storage within that budget.
I’m not a big node guy, but I also kind of doubt nodejs would fail to handle 10RPS on 2gb of memory. I guess it all depends on what the requests are doing.
Oh, for sure. I was responding to the guy saying “I couldn’t figure out the cause, and there was many unnecessary things coming with the OS”
Doesn’t seem like there’s that much extra with Endeavour vs Arch.
Isn’t it just an installer, welcome app, theming, and maybe an Nvidia driver helper?
I don’t think Endeavour really adds that much, but maybe my perception has been wrong this whole time 🤷
Avalonia and Uno Platform if you are working with C#
I personally combine lower end NAS boxes with 4x4 mini PC's. I like the separation of concerns, as well as the tiny footprint.
Honestly, I enjoy the humorous colour names.
Most people want stability (low change) for servers. Arch is typically run where plentiful software updates are welcome. It's not that you can't/shouldn't use Arch for servers, but it isn't the most conventional suggestion.
MySQL (and by extension, MariaDB) has an even better option:
mysql --i-am-a-dummy
He literally explained why he doesn't use Firefox.
Not sure how this thing will compete when there are mini PC's like the Beelink SER7 out there.
Can you explain what "breaks" you are experiencing?
I'm running Fedora/KDE/Wayland on two machines here, and the only oddity I get regularly is on my system with one monitor in landscape and one in portrait. Sometimes half of the landscape screen seems to be funky until I turn the portrait monitor off and on again (almost like it is trying to put the two displays on one for some reason). Most everything else has been flawless.
True, but he mentions .NET development is Windows first, and even mentions that you have "some IDE's that work with it, like Rider". He kind of said it without mentioning the specific IDE.
Rider is the real MVP anyways.
It’s a bad choice to have choice?