I don’t see anyone mentioning sth power efficient yet, so I will throw my two cents in here; I just ordered an Odroid M1S to take over some jobs from my RPi4 (8GB). Has not yet arrived so I cannot praise it yet but might be worth a look!
I don’t see anyone mentioning sth power efficient yet, so I will throw my two cents in here; I just ordered an Odroid M1S to take over some jobs from my RPi4 (8GB). Has not yet arrived so I cannot praise it yet but might be worth a look!
Update: seems like the persistence section is sufficient; I have
persistence:
enabled: true
existingClaim: nextcloud-config-claim
at the end of my values file which references a volume claim (and volume) that I created manually upfront. The importand file is config.php. Back that thing up immediately and three times, print it if you have to. The secret in there is unrecoverable otherwise and needed for any repair actions.
I also use the postgresql sub-chart (by simply enabling postgresql as database) and provide a claim there:
postgresql:
enabled: true
global:
postgresql:
auth:
username: XX
password: YY
database: nextcloud
image:
repository: postgres
tag: "14"
postgresqlDataDir: /bitnami/pgdata
primary:
persistence:
enabled: true
existingClaim: nextcloud-db-claim
Hope it helps!
I think it was literally called “config”. I will check my setup and provide the mount points I used here later today, if you back these up, it should work. Put some disposable data on it once you finished setup and then upgrade to a newer version to see if everything works. You can specify the image tag to use manually (or you install an older chart version).
I also pinned the postgres version to 14, not sure if I can recommend that but I had issues with DB upgrades in a docker installation, so I tend to be careful there.
True. Have a setup running on Kubernetes with their helm chart but the documentation is (or at least was) insufficient on what is important to back up, so I had to start over once, learning the hard way that the config file contains the one string you always need for recovering data. Since then, it is pretty stable and I had almost no problems.
Check if you actually saw multiple people or if it was always just a single user called internetpersona. They are the only one I saw doing that but are quite active here, so you might get a wrong impression. Imo this is completely useless.
Thank you and sorry at the same time for not phrasing my question properly; I know what it is, I am just very baffled on how it should be a bad thing if they strengthen the enforcement net neutrality. Imo, this is always a pure win for the consumer as it prevents a lot of malicious business models. So basically: no idea what the initial commenter is complaining about.
Can you elaborate? 'cause I sure as hell ain’t gonna look it up
Glad to hear thay! Can you give some examples of the games you played with the kids? I’m trying to find titles like that
Steam Deck (so technically PC).
I can lay down on the couch while my SO watches some show on the TV I am not interested in but depending on the game, I can still follow the general story so we can discuss and react to things together. Enabled me to finally do some more gaming (~1 hour per evening) again (compared to a few hour per month previously).
My thoughts exactly. Also, these are a lot of words for very little content, feels like an attempt to obscure the actual intention.
Unified Push.
Unbelievable that we have to rely on Google and co for sth as essential as push messages! Even among the open source community, the adoption is surprisingly limited.
Whenever you accept the TOS, your device is somehow registered/authenticated against their servers. Such a session establishment of course should be secured through TLS, just like all web traffic in general. Frankly, I see the issue here clearly on your side; you have to make sure your device supports up-to-date cryptography standards.
I saw in a different comment that you do not want to replace your phone but you definitely have to replace your software. Find an older build of lineageOS (well, probably even CyanogenMod in this case) and migrate to that. Even if it is based on Android 8, it would still be much more in line with modern security than what you are running now.
Btw, the complaint of you not being able to do banking through your browser anymore while it does not support TLS 1.3 really made me laugh, thank you!
I don’t think you realize just how big the risk is that you are putting yourself in with such old software.
Sorry to hear that! Can confirm that I experience none of these issues on Arch with my 5900X and an Aorus pro wifi (mini ITX), so definitely specific to your combination.
Bobby said I can neither confirm nor deny that
No, I’ll keep on getting mine from the fridge at work.
Same problem here, this is my solution:
exec-once = bash -c 'until waybar; do echo "Waybar crashed with exit code $?. Respawning..." >&2; done'
I used it in a motorbike trip last year and had some trouble but not in the way you describe. I used offline maps, finding my location was a matter of seconds. It would however sometimes not register some “waypoints” and try to lead me back to a point I already passed until I restarted navigation. Annoying when you have a route with several intermediate destinations.
I use organic maps for everyday navigation, never had such issues with that one.
Does anyone know if this is applicable to any ARM64 devices? I’d like to test NixOS on a cheap device and I did not find anything on usable ARM64 devices
Switch banks. I recently did so too after the previous one tried to force a TAN app on me without any way to use a physical generator. Security part aside; I use a custom OS on my phone and these stupid banking apps all love their safety net checks.
New bank was able to just send me a generator and everything works fine.
Second this. Did it a few weeks ago, works perfectly fine. Paid 50€ for a four year old Acer Chromebook 11 and followed the matching guide here: https://mrchromebox.tech/#devices
(Don’t buy my model, the keyboard is crap)