Comparing a fiction sport to actual sport? That a nice shortcut.
Comparing a fiction sport to actual sport? That a nice shortcut.
I like your writing style. Very interesting read.
I’m a casual Linux user. I’ve been in and out of Linux over the last 20 years and I never did a full daily Linux driver. Now I see Steam with the Steam deck and all the development around game compatibility with Linux and I’d like to dive a bit deeper in Linux. I’ve touched the old Mandrake, Open Suse (back then around 2004-2005), Ubuntu, raspbian, Mint etc.
I was never able to find something that would work over time. At some point Ubuntu would install a big upgrade and I’ve read only recently that upgrading to another major milestone is not recommended. It’s recommended to do a fresh install.
I don’t mind doing a fresh install, what I dislike is having to config everything again. I like that everything is customizable but the problem I have is when I dive deeply in customization, I mostly forget what I did, because I only did it once.
Is there any way or any distro that would let me make major upgrade or fresh install without losing all melt settings?
But it takes 2 more minutes to heat up. You end up wasting more water waiting for it to become hot enough
Bitwarden. It’s free, open-srouce, you can even self-host your own instance… or pay 10$/year! for the full support. The free version has everything you will ever need.
This should be illegal. The spoon will drip the juice on the oven. Plus its a hazard if someone happen to swing near the spoon, it’s game over.
Backblaze on a B2 account. 0.005$ per gb. You pay for the storage you use. You pay for when you need to download your backup.
On my truenas server, it’s easy as pie to setup and easy as 🥧 to restore a backup when needed.
More like stuxnet level !