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That’s nice, I think I’ll switch from Firefox ESR on Debian!
That’s nice, I think I’ll switch from Firefox ESR on Debian!
Crunchbang (#!) linux breathed live into some very wimpy hardware I’ve had in the past.
Loved the minimalism.
Desktop: Macintosh ( Windows (XP-10) w/occasional Ubuntu dual-boot (various DEs) -> Debian + Gnome
Server: Ubuntu LTS -> Debian
I’ve also had a number of used thinkpads over the years where I mostly ran Xubuntu and crunchbang.
I still boot into Windows every month or so if I need to model something in Rhino (CAD). Couldn’t get it working in Wine and my 12 YO computer isn’t performant enough to run it in a VM. The last thread remaining and waiting to be cut…
I plan to pay for Immich
I’m really hoping for the 3D options. If OpenSCAD isn’t a good fit then I still boot to Windows for CAD :(
I remember getting a Ubuntu CD box set many years ago when I ordered free disks in the mail as a teenager. The box was well constructed, prints of high quality and the CD labels were especially sharp.
Crazy how physical media was king back then.
After getting used to the vanilla Gnome flow, at home and at work, even MacOS starts to feel a bit clunky.
Love the minimalism of Gnome with the stability of Debian.
If the open source release is adequate then you can just continue using it… Or fork for your needs.
Sadly, still dual boot for rhino, in a VM I’m just not getting enough performance out of my aging pc.
A Linux version would be a dream come true.
I like to require access to 22 via IP whitelist and all services on SSL behind a reverse proxy. Doesn’t leave much surface to attack.
FYI, you can enable a local index for message content searches:
https://proton.me/support/search-message-content#how-to-enable-search-message-content
Are you sure?
This was in the linked article:
- Caching for offline use
Same! Debian with gnome on my desktop and work laptop. Raspbian on my Pi4. Headless Debian in the cloud…
I’m also a gnome shell convert. Down with the taskbar!
You can always set watchtower to blindly pull for you. If it’s going to be broken anyways, might as well automate the process.
#! brings back some good memories :)
Am I understanding correctly that you are building the image by copying in key elements from the host machine’s functioning nginx installation?
This is creative but not common approach to docker.
Normally software is installed following the officially documented procedure (imagine installing using apt or a shell script via RUN). Sometimes software documentation has specific recommendations to follow for containerized installs.
It’s common to have the version defined as a variable where a change in value invalidates the docker layer cache. To me it’s unclear how caching would work with your dockerfile, for example, in the event of a upgrade. You could also see how a breaking change (such as one in the paths you are copying) could run into issues with your hardcoded approach.
In the case of software like nginx, I would use the official image, mount config/cert files instead of copying, and extend in my own dockerfile if needed.
What I love about Debian is there are always instructions regardless of whatever random package I want to use or Linux thing I’m trying to do.
Sorry, I did mean under powered.
Did you ever find the missing packets?