

Damn, I can’t believe I accidentally sexually abused Kate Winslet by pirating Titanic.
Damn, I can’t believe I accidentally sexually abused Kate Winslet by pirating Titanic.
If Netscape had a large paid install base and still failed because a free browser became ubiquitous, what makes you think doing that now when the free browsers are already ubiquitous would work? Especially when it also has to compete with what is essentially already what you’re describing, Librewolf (or just Firefox + Arkenfox).
That’s any recompilation, the game has to be decompiled manually first.
That reddit thread is horrible advice, it’s just mapping the LXC root user to the host root user, which is just a privileged LXC with extra steps (and maybe less secure).
The reason you’re probably having issues is that your root user in the LXC is mapped to the host user 100000 by default, and that user doesn’t have access to the share, but you can change that with mount options or creating a user with 100000:100000 and adding it to a group with access.
Gnome is very functional, it’s just meant to function one very specific way.
I use Tautulli, but I’m not sure if that is going to cover all the same use cases.
For anything. You can get a push notification for anything you can make run a script or send an http request.
Me too. I recently switched from an RTX 2080 to a 7900 XTX, which is way more powerful for games, but local LLM performance tanked without CUDA.
Just run docker in an LXC. That’s what I do when I have to.
I’m not really worried about it. Each LXC runs as its own user on the host, and they only have access to what they need to run each service.
If there’s an exploit found that makes that setup inherently vulnerable then a lot of people would be way more screwed than I would.
I don’t have anything publically accesible on my network (other than wireguard), but if I did I’d just put whatever it was on its own VLAN, run a wireguard server on it, and use a VPS as a reverse proxy that connects to it.
I only use unprivileged LXCs and everything I host on my network runs in its own LXC, so I’m not really worried about someone getting access to the host from there.
They definitely spent the equivalent of at least one or two laid-off employee’s salary to design a logo that’s worse than their last one.
I occasionally get this same thing, or it’ll render one frame of SDDM and then freeze on that frame, and I’ve also never been able to fix it. I’m on CachyOS with an RTX 2080.
I just bought a 7900 XTX that I’m waiting to be shipped, so I wonder if it’ll go away with an AMD GPU.
Edit: Hasn’t happened once with the AMD card, and another frequent issue I had with Vulkan was fixed too. I’m blaming nvidia.
If it does the basic things that I want it to do well without being surrounded by the bloat of useless profit-driven features, and it’s FOSS, then it isn’t inferior to me.
The only meaningful update (to me) Plex has had in the past few years has been forcing everyone to switch from using TVDB to their inferior metadata agent.
Because it’s continuing the trend of focusing on live free channel streaming, finding things to watch on other streaming services, social media-esque interactions with other users, and other shit I don’t care about.
I just want something that will stream my media from my NAS to whatever I’m trying to watch it on, and do it well.
If this turns out as bad as it seems then I’ll probably finally be leaving my lifetime Plex pass behind for jellyfin once it rolls out to the Android TV app.
Just turn the updates off. Might want to remove the seatbelts from your car too, so annoying having to put them on and take them off every time you need to drive somewhere.
I’ve been using it as my primary browser on Android for years so I don’t really have much to compare it to, but I haven’t had any issues with extension compatibility. It includes changes from Tor browser and Arkenfox so it’s more privacy-focused than on performance.
I’ll just throw out Mull from DivestOS’s third-party f-droid repo as an up to date alternative. The newest versions are incompatible with the main repo but here is their explanation:
Updated Mull to 131.0.0, has 14+1+25 security fixes from the previous 129.0.2 release. In order to resolve the compilation issue introduced in 130, Mull is now compiled using Mozilla’s prebuilt clang toolchain. This however is incompatible with the F-Droid.org inclusion criteria, so these updates (for now at least) will only be available via the DivestOS.org F-Droid repository. Please note, while this adds a prebuilt dependency, the result does still remain FOSS.
I think you deliberately skipped this part.