The Hackernews company gets shit on a lot by Lemmy and Reddit. From my understanding, they have a lot of bad people who run the company.
I would just use Lemmy and Reddit instead.
The Hackernews company gets shit on a lot by Lemmy and Reddit. From my understanding, they have a lot of bad people who run the company.
I would just use Lemmy and Reddit instead.
Edited, thanks @Björn:
Whatever destination computer you’re looking to connect to, install Sunshine.
Then on the source computer, use Moonlight to connect to the destination.
That’s misinformation. Tailscale is Canadian. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tailscale


Toolbox?
Edit: Oh cool! Thanks for sharing.
https://github.com/containers/toolbox


I use Cockpit which comes with many other awesome features too.
Raspberry Pi 5 exists?
Oh neat! https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/


Thank you! I was wondering if there would be one soon. Glad some people were already offering to do the job.


I use a Navidrome server and ProjectBlue app on my Android. I haven’t figured out how to download music for offline use by using my ProjectBlue app though.
Debian is fine, but if you have technical troubles you don’t want to deal with, then go straight to Ubuntu. Either Kubuntu (Ubuntu with KDE), Ubuntu, or some other Ubuntu variation.
As a new Linux user, I would recommend Ubuntu over Debian. It is easier to setup, has a lot more online documentation, provides various apps to make life a bit simplier like integrations and AppStore (even though you should try to away from Linux app store because of broken apps)
Arch is really the king diamond in desktop Linux in my opinion, due to their rolling releases (I love new stuff even if it may break things), but especially because for the Arch Wiki (which is good for other OS users to read too) and the Arch AUR. If going Arch, I recommend using
arch-installto make installing it much easier. Update the default arch-install after bootingpacman -Ss arch-installthen just run.Also as a new or intermediate Linux user, I strongly recommend LTS (Long Term Support) versions. For example, Ubuntus latest version is not LTS, and has been out for multiple months, and there are still a huge amount of apps not ready to easily install – and you either have to spend a lot of time to figure it out yourself, or lose the chance to use some apps.