I print from my phone just fine
I print from my phone just fine
Ah yes, the immutable OS, except for all of the various mutable parts.
We should totally not call it anything less confusing.
How could you install anything or change any setting if it “doesn’t change” ?
How could you install anything or change any setting if it was truly immutable?
Immutable OS makes sense in certain scenarios, but not in home computing.
I second this.
I’ve learned about it at work and used it privately.
I use Dokploy and I think it fills exatly the same role.
sr.ht is pretty good if you don’t care about a web GUI
If this is a HDD you could recover it.
If SSD - no.
Why would you need a travel router?
The rpi already can be set up to hotspot it’s own wifi network.
For connecting to hotel wifi, a simple usb dongle is good enough, as discussed here: https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=287485
In regards to VPN-ing into the media server at home - depending on where you travel, you might not have any internet or you might use up your mobile data volume.
They support AMD as well.
https://ollama.com/blog/amd-preview
also check out this thread:
https://github.com/ollama/ollama/issues/1590
Seems like you can run llama.cpp directly on intel ARC through Vulkan, but there are still some hurdles for ollama.
Contabo
netcup
Wayland support: Experimental support in Deskflow v1.16 (required >= GNOME 46 or KDE Plasma 6.1).
I use borgbackup with borgmatic.
Backing it up to a local hdd and to a hetzter storage box.
Since you say
change the path the .wav audio file
fyi, the sys BAT paths are also different per laptop. Just in case it doesn’t work for somebody else or for you on a different laptop.
We already have freetube
Definitive roadmap (for the lazy people edition):
Just fyi
a storage controller on an USB stick also has programmed “Gb” for addressing the flash storage. For example if you want to remove one of the flash chips, you could be asking how to reprogram the controller to use only half of it’s initial capacity. Thats what I was confused about.
But you actually meant Gb/s.
The main difference to your examples is that an “immutable OS” is in fact mutable, while none of your examples describe themselves with an adjective that is contradicting with their function/inner workings.
Flatpak is a pretty good name, because it makes software flat in the sense that it avoids having a (tall) dependency tree.