Agreed. My answer was in the assumption that it’s about desktop apps as the OP mentioned Electron.
Agreed. My answer was in the assumption that it’s about desktop apps as the OP mentioned Electron.
I think I heared that lan-only mode means you need to transfer the files to print via SD card.
Go with one of the ready to use systems. Flatpak, Snap, AppImage. Snap is largely Ubuntu Ecosystem, Flatpak is independent. AppImage is an option if you do not need/want a Sandbox.
Stay away from Docker and LXC for this use case (graphical applications), they are much more work to get going.
I have some Sandy Bridge systems here running strong as Linux desktops for light work. You know, these 4-core 3,3GHz processors from - hmm - 2014?
Honestly I doubt it that Deckard will change that much. First the basics must be fixed. My Index is also laying around collecting dust. Worked okay-ish at first but is mostly unusable at the moment.
Or make it old school and use the hostname instead of the IP.
I use an AMD 7900rx with an AMD 7950x processor since almost a year with Gnome / Wayland on Arch. No problems up to now. Yes, I am a gamer too.
As others said it depends on the distribution you use.
Sponsored links: Mozilla gets money for AD links showing up below the search url on the new tabs page. If you do not disable them (they are on by default).
glibc is a library, gcc is the compiler.
The hot water pipe to the kitchen is quite long. We have a pipe loop there with a pump. Back in the days we had an ordinary timer that let the pump run at the usual times when there is hot water demand to be expected.
I now use a Zigbee plug for the pump and added a button in the kitchen to start it manually. In addidion HA starts it in the morning and every time when somebody comes home. Another HA automation turns off the pump after 3 minutes and ensures that it does not start again for 30 minutes.
This comparison looks neutral: https://www.freie-messenger.de/en/systemvergleich/xmpp-matrix/
I use Gnome but Cinnamon and Gnome are not that different in that topic IIRC. I have to mount the remote folder via file manager (Nautilus) then I can access the files in Code.
Let’s call it “soonish”. The old proton versions still need 32 bit libs if they do not backport the feature.
Great article. Reminds me of the time when I started using Linux as my main work system, back with kernel 0.99z
It reads “158 Tesla Megapacks”. But yeah, these could contain Duracell :D
But then they would show the general public that Linux is a thing worth mentioning. I doubt that many people outside IT know about CBL Mariner.
I always run occ upgrade
and occ db:add-missing-indices
after a package upgrade, just to be sure that I do not miss any database migrations. Using Archlinux I wrote a pacman hook so that it happens automatically.
I would go with the dongle (and sell the gateway). Zigbee2mqtt works really well for me.
But you will have to add all your Zigbee devices to this new coordinator.
Nice. Have fun with it!