You can reinstall the OS without overwriting your home partition or any other data partition. That’s always an option.
You can reinstall the OS without overwriting your home partition or any other data partition. That’s always an option.
That’s right. zsh is POSIX compliant while fish is not. That’s the reason I switched to zsh from fish.
That’s right, to add a bit more color, any of Proton mail paid plans allows you to use Proton Bridge (which runs locally and speaks IMAP to your mail client).
Are you trying the terminal commands with sudo
?
You could also try logging in as root
user with the password you used during setup.
Yes, Gitea is a hard-fork of Gogs and started years ago. Forgejo is a soft-fork of Gitea when the primary authors of Gitea created a company of the same name to provide paid support (there’s history there you can look up) but Gitea remains free and open source. Forgejo, supported by Codeberg, is a community fork and will upstream to Gitea.
Gitea/Forgejo is a great option, they recently even added build actions which are compatible with Github Actions.
It’s still a good thing. It’s an open specification, so anyone creating a design that is compliant can use software targeted at RISC-V. Just like you can buy USB-C flash drive from any manufacturer and use it with any OS that supports USB mass storage!
You can get the Tailscale apk from F-droid: https://f-droid.org/en/packages/com.tailscale.ipn/
Racknerd.com has their Black Friday deals page still active and I’ve had good experience with their shared hosting and support!
I would recommend Tailscale for connecting to the home network. You could run it on each box if running it on the router is wonky.
Just to clarify the entire Logseq app is open source including the sync mechanism, the server backend to receive the sync endpoint and store the data isn’t. I use Syncthing (FOSS and cross platform) to sync noted between my devices.
The comments here have been the most measured and useful about this topic, glad you got great information that others can benefit from now.
Missing an image?!
Quick example in straight C would be a cell in a matrix. The first pointer points to the row and the second pointer points to the cell in that row. This is am over simplification.
I would recommend looking into Syncthing. I use it on all my devices and share specific folders between devices (notes mostly) and all folders back to the server. The server then backs all that up offsite as well.
Thanks for the pointers, those will be a good reference. Now I just need to get started with a beginner how to!
I’d like to try Wayland + Sway. Do you have any recommendations for a starting config?
While this is a valid advice normally, OP has already tried this with Linux on a netbook and a dual boot chromebook. Since OP wants to do AV stuff it’s probably going to be a lot better experience with a desktop (assuming more capable than laptop) and monitor(s). Going another laptop route might be fine for learning but OP wants to switch and that’s not going to happen unless it’s on OP’s main rig.
My advice would be leave the windows installation alone and add a new drive (SSDs are pretty cheap these days) and install Linux on that. Use the BIOS to set the default drive to the new Linux drive and install and use Linux. You’ll have your windows install exactly how it is when you want to go back and just pick that as the boot device from the boot menu. Making Linux the default boot drive also helps with habit forming.
Clearly the dark mode is the modern one! Jokes aside, I just realized that there THREE menu options on that toolbar: hamburger, kebab, and waffle! I realize they do different things, but no wonder people are confused by and scared of computers. Also, now I’m hungry!