in my terminal I press ctrl + r and then type the name of the machine
in my terminal I press ctrl + r and then type the name of the machine
Does input-leap do what you need from Barriers? I control my testing mac at work with input-leap
Organise Settings better, put common features front and centre?
Why is finding my IP address so hard on a Windows machine? Its either open settings app and click down 3 layers deep or open a pwsh prompt and either ipconfig or Get-NetIPAddress.
Linux click network applet in most desktop environments. Even MacOS option + click network icon
“we replaced the browser with ad ware, that we even admit we had to ship settings to minimise its malware effect”
if you’re worried about the integrity of the sources you’re installing from why are you using app images? Use a repo, or flathub
Id rather just sign in with my gpg key
does anyone buy a product for AI or Assistant features?
I love that its “Nazi, Nazi, Nazi … Bellend”
The TOS on Firefox is a bit shit, but TLE is also going the click bait angle lately, last week he was riling up viewers about some comments from Fedora’s Matt Miller about Flatpaks on Flathub (an area that Miller is not an expert in, nor should he be considered one), Nick saying he could no longer respect Fedora in the Video, but then in the comments walking it back. Youtubers are going to Youtube
Any of the ostree variants of Fedora, be they Fedora Official or downstream ones like the Universal Blue family
Fedora’s repo build has had this turned on for literally years
there is some change of workflow, but its not difficult. The benefits outweigh the changes or any perceived draw back IMHO
Any chances you guys could suggest me one setup that “just works” no ifs and no buts? Or does it not exist in the Linux world?
You’ve given so little insight into your experience
My most recent hardware has been fine
In the past I’ve had thinkpads (an X1 carbon and a T485), also good choices
Over my 12 years of using Linux as my daily for work and home (and about 13 years of fiddling with it on and off before that), avoid realtek hardware, avoid nvidia gpus, avoid switchable graphics, avoid strange OEM feature devices. Check hardware for compatibility before you buy it. Stick to mainstream distros, not niche 1 man community distros. I’ve moved to immutable/atomic distros because they are harder to tinker with outside of user space, as historically tinkering is what got me into trouble, now I do that in a container away from my base OS.
I work tech in schools (in Australia) there are definitely tech savvy enough kids that will probably spool up their own fediverse instances
if you’re already a Fedora KDE user not much, but if you’re coming to Fedora for the first time the options on the Fedora page will put forward a KDE version next to the standard Gnome workstation, instead of hiding it on the spins page. Although internally the KDE version has been a mostly “first class citizen” (eg bugs in KDE spin has been release blocking), it will appear that way from a marketing perspective
I bought solid explorer at the dawn of android and still use it to this day
what’s your plan on teaching these people to maintain their selfhosted instances? Are you selling support? I mean you could script pulling and recreating containers, but without eyeballs on it, that stuff will die eventually.
a private school needs to give the appearance that they do, or at least have this capability when someone asks. On the ground, its barely used
I work IT in schools. There is limited surveillance tools on college owned devices. Mainly logging of web traffic. Screens can be viewed when on campus network, not reachable off campus.
No one in our department has time to waste looking at web history or screens. Teachers don’t bother to use it much either. We only look at it when directed by college executive or when I go in there at the end of term to clear the alerts.
I’d imagine most other schools are similar, no one gives a shit what kids are doing on their devices
they should also blank the screen if the user has recall enabled