Works really great. I use it a lot and the interface is easy to navigate.
Works really great. I use it a lot and the interface is easy to navigate.
It is foss software with a big community. Not getting any safer
Why not. Peer to peer sounds like a good idea: https://radicle.xyz/
Thats what i use
Onepace is a fan project that recuts the One Piece anime in an endeavor to bring it more in line with the pacing of the original manga by Eiichiro Oda. The team accomplishes this by removing filler scenes not present in the source material.
They have torrents for all their episodes. I can really recommend, because Onepace is not as stupidly drawn out as Onepiece can sometimes be.
I dont think thats really the goal here. NixOS is not designed to be used by your grandmother. Better Documentation would sometimes be nice though.
By the way, there already is https://github.com/vlinkz/nixos-conf-editor
Now im interested for release
Are they really using NixOS for development? Hella Cool
Another question: do you know what you UPS is pulling? Recently had a really good offer on one, but denied because power here is really stable and i thought i can safe the watts.
My whole homelab pulls something like 150 for 2 Servers (one ryzen 5 and one i3 8th gen). 200 seems not so much for urs. Have you done any power optimisation on your machines?
Looks so cool! How much juice is the whole rack pulling?
Makes sense but even then i would just run automatic updates every few months. Just to keep best practice. Nonetheless cool uptime, now do 10 years :)
Not so high because of frequent updates and reboots for security
Only real option if you want to tinker
I use REAPER, which also has native Linux support and run most of my vsts over yabridge. Works really well for me overall but i try to use as much native foss vsts as possible. See https://safereddit.com/r/linuxaudio/comments/wntpyd/linux_plugins_thread_2022/ for some examples
Is there a reason you use mercurial (like work) or are you using it, because you like it better than git or fossil?
If any of the people you introduce to linux would care about systemd