<p>More folks need to follow this <a href="https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/latest/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/latest/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">specifications.freedesktop.org</span><span class="invisible">/basedir-spec/latest/</span></a> and not make a hot mess of my damn home directory <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#linux</a> <a href="/tags/ubuntu/" rel="tag">#ubuntu</a> <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a></p>
debian
<p>🎉 今天发布 Debian 13 Trixie.</p><p><a href="https://www.debian.org/distrib/index.zh-cn.html" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.debian.org/distrib/index.zh-cn.html"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.debian.org/distrib/index.z</span><span class="invisible">h-cn.html</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a></p>
<p>Librewolf is exactly what Firefox should be.</p><p>To the point where I find in <a href="/tags/librewolf/" rel="tag">#Librewolf</a> new features I was explicitly missing in <a href="/tags/firefox/" rel="tag">#firefox</a> (like clicking on the lock to enable/disable cookies for a specific website)</p><p>And, yet, it works perfectly in <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a> thanks to extrepo. But, seriously, it should be considered as the default Debian browser.</p><p>Congratulations to the team!</p><p>Don’t wait on Mozilla, switch to Librewolf !</p><p><a href="https://librewolf.net/" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>librewolf.net/</a></p><p><span class="h-card"><a href="https://chaos.social/@librewolf" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>librewolf</span></a></span></p>
It has been overshadowed by the release of the Trixie Installer RC1 release, but <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> has also released a <a href="https://www.debian.org/News/2025/20250517" rel="nofollow">point release for Bookworm</a> today.<br><br>It was a great opportunity to define net.ipv{6,4}.ip_nonlocal_bind so nginx(8) at thebus.top finally starts at boot without error because it has network but no IP defined. Once again systemd doing its stuff -_-'<br>
Edited 323d ago
<p>Debian 13 "trixie" has been released, thanks to everyone involved! "trixie" images are available for download at <a href="https://www.debian.org/distrib/" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>www.debian.org/distrib/</a> or you can run apt full-upgrade as always ;-) <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a> <a href="/tags/debian13/" rel="tag">#debian13</a> <a href="/tags/trixie/" rel="tag">#trixie</a> <a href="/tags/releasingdebiantrixie/" rel="tag">#ReleasingDebianTrixie</a></p>
I think I have removed all the Wayland bits that I can from my Debian OS. I don't need stuff I do not use on my system. I tried Wayland the other day and some of my programs didn't even work. That was the last straw. <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> <a href="/tags/wayland/" rel="tag">#Wayland</a> <a href="/tags/x11/" rel="tag">#X11</a> <a href="/tags/xwindows/" rel="tag">#XWindows</a><br>
<p>Pondering <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> distros...</p><p>Arch-based<p>You're either doing the full Arch experience (good for you), or doing something Arch-based that's going to be unpredictably unstable and leave you with a non-booting system at some point in the future, and not having the technical understanding to fix it. Been burned by that already (twice!), hard pass.</p><br>Directly <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a>-based<p>I love Debian. I've loved it ever since a kind person at a Linux LUG burned me a copy of the Debian Potato 2.2 CD-ROMs in 2000. But an every-two-year release schedule is kind of hard to deal with given our current break-neck seat-of-your-pants development practices. Lots of compilers don't even want to work in Debian after midpoint or so in the release (1 year old), requiring things like rustup to be able to compile many tools.</p><br>Ubuntu-based<p>I'm going to skip over all of the meme-based criticisms of Ubuntu, and even the more technical criticisms of snap, which isn't that hard to eliminate. Simply put, from the things I've read, canonical sounds like a cult of personality, and gives me a bit of the heebie-jeebies. Other than that, ubuntu-based distros have the great benefit of actually decent user-focus and community support.</p><br>Fedora-based<p><a href="/tags/fedora/" rel="tag">#Fedora</a> is adored by a lot of Linux enthusiasts, and has the benefit of a fairly large user-base, as well as being in the sweet-spot of having biannual updates. The only negative is the big lumbering evil shadow of IBM. I honestly don't know exactly what the relationship between Fedora and IBM (RedHat) is, but I'm fairly certain [<a href="https://old.reddit.com/r/Fedora/comments/157sngv/discussion_is_fedora_really_a_corporate_distro/" rel="nofollow">it can't be said that there is none</a>].</p></p><p>Umm... what exactly is left? Anything user-friendly? Well, perhaps...</p><p>OpenSuSE-based. (Yes, I'm using the old capitalization, because I'm crochety like that ;)<p>OpenSUSE Leap seems to have a release every year, which is pretty cool, but the new <a href="/tags/opensuse/" rel="tag">#OpenSUSE</a> <a href="/tags/slowroll/" rel="tag">#SlowRoll</a> seems like a really nice solution!<br>SUSE gives off a lot of "RedHat before they turned super evil" vibes, and I'm down with that<br>OpenSuSE also packages a lot of software for other distros. The debian package I'm using for <a href="/tags/gpxsee/" rel="tag">#GPXSee</a>, for example, is provided by <a href="https://packages.opensuse.org" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>packages.opensuse.org</a> — that's super cool!</p></p>
Edited 306d ago
<p><a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a> stable is too "stable" for the desktop, the unstable is too unstable, <a href="/tags/fedora/" rel="tag">#fedora</a> is entering the AI craze, <a href="/tags/arch/" rel="tag">#arch</a> is too much for me. I think it's time to try <a href="/tags/opensuse/" rel="tag">#opensuse</a>. Never used it, so it's going to be interesting :)</p>
<p>Since Debian Linux has recently left X, you can follow it on Mastodon:</p><p><span class="h-card"><a href="https://framapiaf.org/@debian" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>debian</span></a></span></p><p><a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a> <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#linux</a> <a href="/tags/distro/" rel="tag">#distro</a> <a href="/tags/debianproject/" rel="tag">#debianproject</a></p>
Edited 1y ago
<p>Tech status: Upgrading OS and dealing with unpatched bugs that were fixed upstream 2ya.</p><p>The current state of <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> quality is looking pretty dank. </p><p><a href="/tags/fedora/" rel="tag">#fedora</a> <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a> <a href="/tags/gnu/" rel="tag">#gnu</a> <a href="/tags/kde/" rel="tag">#kde</a></p>
<img src="https://neodb.social/media/emoji/snac.daltux.net/debian.png" class="emoji" alt=":debian:" title=":debian:"> 📰 Apareceram notícias sobre o pacote <a href="https://packages.debian.org/sid/curl" rel="nofollow">curl</a>, ao atualizá-lo hoje no <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> <a href="/tags/sid/" rel="tag">#sid</a> (unstable) e que achei interessantes compartilhar. É o anúncio de alterações importantes, aparentemente entrando em efeito agora e iniciadas alguns meses atrás pelos mantenedores, em suma:<br><br>- O utilitário curl, a partir da versão 8.8.0-2, passa a suportar <a href="https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP/3" rel="nofollow">HTTP/3</a>, com os parâmetros --http3 ou --http3-only. Para conseguir isso, o programa agora passa a utilizar <a href="https://www.gnutls.org/" rel="nofollow">GnuTLS</a> no lugar de <a href="https://packages.debian.org/sid/openssl" rel="nofollow">OpenSSL</a>. Ainda fornecerão uma variação de libcurl que continua usando OpenSSL.<br><br>- Incluíram o comando wcurl (<a href="https://manpages.debian.org/unstable/curl/wcurl.1" rel="nofollow">veja seu manual</a>) que facilita baixar um arquivo sem precisar lembrar os parâmetros do curl. Pode ser chamado no lugar dos usos mais simples de wget.<br><br>O conteúdo completo da mensagem está em <a href="https://metadata.ftp-master.debian.org/changelogs/main/c/curl/curl_8.12.0+git20250209.89ed161+ds-1_curl.NEWS" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="metadata.ftp-master.debian.org/changelogs/main/c/curl/curl_8.12.0+git20250209.89ed161+ds-1_curl.NEWS"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">metadata.ftp-master.debian.org</span><span class="invisible">/changelogs/main/c/curl/curl_8.12.0+git20250209.89ed161+ds-1_curl.NEWS</span></a><br><br><a href="/tags/curl/" rel="tag">#curl</a> <a href="/tags/http3/" rel="tag">#http3</a> <a href="/tags/gnutls/" rel="tag">#gnutls</a> <a href="/tags/openssl/" rel="tag">#openssl</a> <a href="/tags/gnu/" rel="tag">#gnu</a> <a href="/tags/softwarelivre/" rel="tag">#softwareLivre</a><br>
Edited 1y ago
Updated Version of the apache http caching setup for snac, including proxy media<br><br>I already wrote about caching <a href="https://snikket.de/social/menel/p/1738788742.236526" rel="nofollow">here</a>.<br>Now I extended what I cache a bit.<br>This was because after enabling the option to <a href="https://comam.es/snac-doc/snac.8.html#proxy_media" rel="nofollow">proxy media</a>, I've seen access to the file paths /x/ and /y/ in addition to the path were snac stores the media that I include in my own posts ( /s/ ).<br>There are two locations to proxy media, depending if you requests the media via the mastodon api or via the web. (/x/ and /y/), oh and I added the nodeinfo2.0 path too, because I've noticed it was queried all the time by a lot of instances and it gives me pleasure to see something cached handed out in the access logs. 🙂 (I guess it is actually irrelevant for the system resources)<br>This is the updated setup:<br>Enable the relevant modules:<br><br>a2enmod expires cache cache_disk<br><br>Be sure "htcacheclean" is running to clean up the old disk cache. (under debian see /etc/default/apache-htcacheclean or else the relevant systemd service or whatever)<br>Then add this to the httpd Virtualhost config:<br><br><p><LocationMatch "^/social/[^/]+/[xys]/|^/social/nodeinfo_2_0"><br>CacheEnable disk<br>Header set Cache-Control "max-age=86400, public" "expr=%{REQUEST_STATUS} == 200"<br>ExpiresActive On<br>ExpiresDefault "access plus 86400 seconds"<br></LocationMatch><br></p>This will use the disk cache to cache everything under the $username/s/, /x/ and /y/ paths, as well as for the /nodeinfo_2_0 path, utilizing mod_expires to generate the appropriate cache headers (for lazy ones like me). In this case caching it for 1 day.<br>Further reading and all options are explained under <a href="https://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/caching.html" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/caching.html"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/cach</span><span class="invisible">ing.html</span></a> (and ff)<br><br>The Header that I set here, on the condition of Status code 200, is needed for the path /y/, because snac set no-cache on that location and mod_expires will honor that if we don't override it. I set it to the same Cache-Control value as mod_expires would. (I use mod_expires because it will additionally calculate the date and put that in the expires header. (hence the name I guess 😀 )<br><br><a href="/tags/fediverse/" rel="tag">#Fediverse</a> <a href="/tags/hosting/" rel="tag">#Hosting</a> <a href="/tags/itnotes/" rel="tag">#ITNotes</a> <a href="/tags/apache2/" rel="tag">#apache2</a> <a href="/tags/httpd/" rel="tag">#httpd</a> <a href="/tags/ownyourdata/" rel="tag">#Ownyourdata</a> <a href="/tags/server/" rel="tag">#Server</a> <a href="/tags/snac/" rel="tag">#Snac</a> <a href="/tags/snac2/" rel="tag">#Snac2</a> <a href="/tags/tipsandtricks/" rel="tag">#Tipsandtricks</a> <a href="/tags/tutorial/" rel="tag">#Tutorial</a> <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> <a href="/tags/caching/" rel="tag">#caching</a><br><img src="https://neodb.social/media/emoji/snikket.de/xmpp.png" class="emoji" alt=":xmpp:" title=":xmpp:"><br>
Edited 1y ago
A slightly improved revision of apt-upgrade is now available at <a href="https://git.disroot.org/daltux/apt-upgrade/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="git.disroot.org/daltux/apt-upgrade/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">git.disroot.org/daltux/apt-upg</span><span class="invisible">rade/</span></a><br><br>This is a small personal collection of <img src="https://neodb.social/media/emoji/snac.daltux.net/gnu.png" class="emoji" alt=":gnu:" title=":gnu:"> <a href="/tags/gnu/" rel="tag">#GNU</a> <a href="/tags/bash/" rel="tag">#Bash</a> scripts I’ve put together to simplify everyday updates for all the common stuff on <img src="https://neodb.social/media/emoji/snac.daltux.net/debian.png" class="emoji" alt=":debian:" title=":debian:"> Debian <a href="https://gnu.org/gnu/gnu-linux-faq.html" rel="nofollow">GNU/Linux</a>-based systems. It has been available under the <a href="/tags/gplv3/" rel="tag">#GPLv3</a>+ for a while, so you are free to use, study, modify, and share it however you see fit—following <a href="/tags/copyleft/" rel="tag">#Copyleft</a> principles, always preserving the <a href="https://gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html" rel="nofollow">users' freedoms</a>. If you improve it, consider sharing back your changes to help keep the spirit of <a href="/tags/freesoftware/" rel="tag">#FreeSoftware</a> alive. 🤝<br><br>I’d love to hear if it ends up being useful for you! If you run into any issues or have suggestions, please <a href="https://git.disroot.org/daltux/apt-upgrade/issues" rel="nofollow">report them directly on Disroot Forgejo</a> or just drop a comment here.<br><br><a href="/tags/apt/" rel="tag">#apt</a> <a href="/tags/nala/" rel="tag">#nala</a> <a href="/tags/shell/" rel="tag">#shell</a> <a href="/tags/script/" rel="tag">#script</a> <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> <a href="/tags/gnulinux/" rel="tag">#GNUlinux</a> <a href="/tags/freeasinfreedom/" rel="tag">#FreeAsInFreedom</a> <a href="/tags/disroot/" rel="tag">#Disroot</a> <a href="/tags/softwarelivre/" rel="tag">#SoftwareLivre</a><br>
Also yesterday I found out that <a href="/tags/amazon/" rel="tag">#Amazon</a> website won't open on my laptop <a href="/tags/firefox/" rel="tag">#Firefox</a> running <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a>. I have to use <a href="/tags/amazon/" rel="tag">#Amazon</a> for both work and life. Weird thing is, it opens just fine with <a href="/tags/librewolf/" rel="tag">#LibreWolf</a>. Tried clear cache and cookie, did not work.<br>
<p>TIL that one of the most important skateboarders in <a href="/tags/skateboarding/" rel="tag">#skateboarding</a> history - Rodney Mullen - is a <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> user.</p><p>In this video he's wearing a <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> shirt!</p><p>He invented a lot of modern skateboarding tricks including flatground ollie, kickflip and 360 flip!</p><p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1BiPyyEwWc" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1BiPyyEwWc"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1BiPy</span><span class="invisible">yEwWc</span></a></p>
<p>This made me chuckle.</p><p><a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a> <a href="/tags/humor/" rel="tag">#humor</a> <a href="/tags/ipv6/" rel="tag">#ipv6</a> <a href="/tags/y2k38/" rel="tag">#y2k38</a> <a href="/tags/hackernews/" rel="tag">#hackernews</a></p>
Vou, finalmente, converter uma primeira máquina virtual no centro de dados da universidade de <a href="/tags/gnu/" rel="tag">#GNU</a>/<a href="https://gnu.org/gnu/linux-and-gnu.html" rel="nofollow">Linux</a> para <a href="https://gnu.org/" rel="nofollow">GNU</a>/<a href="https://www.fsfla.org/ikiwiki/selibre/linux-libre/" rel="nofollow">Linux-libre</a>! <img src="https://neodb.social/media/emoji/snac.daltux.net/gnu.png" class="emoji" alt=":gnu:" title=":gnu:"><br><br>Pretendo seguir a ótima <a href="https://snac.lx.oliva.nom.br/lxo/p/1739945097.235558" rel="nofollow">dica postada</a> numa <a href="/tags/tersoftware/" rel="tag">#TerSoftware</a> por um dos próprios autores do projeto, <span class="h-card"><a href="https://snac.lx.oliva.nom.br/lxo" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>lxo</span></a></span>, para aproveitar os pacotes .deb (para <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> e derivados) já disponibilizados com o kernel Linux-libre compilado para uso geral para diversas arquiteturas:<br><br><a href="https://www.fsfla.org/ikiwiki/selibre/linux-libre/freesh" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.fsfla.org/ikiwiki/selibre/linux-libre/freesh"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.fsfla.org/ikiwiki/selibre/</span><span class="invisible">linux-libre/freesh</span></a><br><br>A parte mais "difícil" parece ser decidir: linux-libre-lts ou o convencional... 😅<br><br><a href="/tags/gnulinux/" rel="tag">#GNUlinux</a> <a href="/tags/linuxlibre/" rel="tag">#LinuxLibre</a> <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> <a href="/tags/kernel/" rel="tag">#kernel</a> <a href="/tags/softwarelivre/" rel="tag">#SoftwareLivre</a><br>
Edited 1y ago
<p>Zweimal bekam <a href="/tags/archinstall/" rel="tag">#archinstall</a> seine Chance. Zweimal wartete ich über 5 Min. bis die Mirror-Listen geladen, über 10 Min. bis die keyrings abgeglichen waren, um dann beide Male über 700 MB an Daten herunterzuladen. Nur um am Ende einen Fehler präsentiert zu bekommen, den ich bei dunkelroter Schrift auf schwarzem Hintergrund nicht entziffern kann. Das war's für <a href="/tags/archlinux/" rel="tag">#ArchLinux</a> 😤 🤯 ☠️</p><p>Im freien WLAN der Bücherei werde ich mir morgen <a href="/tags/antix/" rel="tag">#AntiX</a> herunterladen. Mein Datenvolumen wurde ja jetzt unnötig dezimiert. Somit zurück zu <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a>.</p>
<p><a href="/tags/interesting/" rel="tag">#Interesting</a> notes <a href="https://www.debian.org/releases/trixie/release-notes/issues.en.html" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.debian.org/releases/trixie/release-notes/issues.en.html"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.debian.org/releases/trixie</span><span class="invisible">/release-notes/issues.en.html</span></a> from the notes on updating <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> v12/Bookworm to v13/Trixie <a href="https://www.debian.org/releases/trixie/release-notes/index.en.html" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.debian.org/releases/trixie/release-notes/index.en.html"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.debian.org/releases/trixie</span><span class="invisible">/release-notes/index.en.html</span></a> ...</p><p>- "last(1)" is gone (due to upstream project not updating software to account for post-year-2038 time), replaced by "wtmpd" -- and "lastcomm(1)" is unaffected?</p><p>- may need to twiddle so that "ping(1)" would work for mortal-users;</p><p>- "/tmp and /var/tmp are now regularly cleaned" -- nice;<br>...</p>
Edited 239d ago
<p>I have a theory about 6-month Linux and BSD upgrades having their own kind of "stability" because there's not as far to go between releases <a href="https://zola.passthejoe.net/blog/six-month-stability/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="zola.passthejoe.net/blog/six-month-stability/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">zola.passthejoe.net/blog/six-m</span><span class="invisible">onth-stability/</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> <a href="/tags/fedora/" rel="tag">#Fedora</a> <a href="/tags/silverblue/" rel="tag">#Silverblue</a> <a href="/tags/openbsd/" rel="tag">#OpenBSD</a> <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> <a href="/tags/ubuntu/" rel="tag">#Ubuntu</a></p>
<p><a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> folk, what version are you on as of now?</p>
<div class="poll">
<h3 style="display: none;">Options: </h3>
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<li>
<label class="poll-option">
<input style="display:none" name="vote-options" type="checkbox" value="0">
<span class="poll-number" title="0 votes">0%</span>
<span class="poll-option-text">Uhh, 2.2 / Potato!! XD</span>
</label>
</li>
<li>
<label class="poll-option">
<input style="display:none" name="vote-options" type="checkbox" value="0">
<span class="poll-number" title="2 votes">5%</span>
<span class="poll-option-text">10 / Buster / oldoldstable</span>
</label>
</li>
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<input style="display:none" name="vote-options" type="checkbox" value="0">
<span class="poll-number" title="6 votes">14%</span>
<span class="poll-option-text">11 / Bullseye / oldstable</span>
</label>
</li>
<li>
<label class="poll-option">
<input style="display:none" name="vote-options" type="checkbox" value="0">
<span class="poll-number" title="17 votes">40%</span>
<span class="poll-option-text">12 / Bookworm / stable</span>
</label>
</li>
<li>
<label class="poll-option">
<input style="display:none" name="vote-options" type="checkbox" value="0">
<span class="poll-number" title="12 votes">29%</span>
<span class="poll-option-text">13 / Trixie / testing</span>
</label>
</li>
<li>
<label class="poll-option">
<input style="display:none" name="vote-options" type="checkbox" value="0">
<span class="poll-number" title="3 votes">7%</span>
<span class="poll-option-text">sid</span>
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</li>
<li>
<label class="poll-option">
<input style="display:none" name="vote-options" type="checkbox" value="0">
<span class="poll-number" title="1 votes">2%</span>
<span class="poll-option-text">experimental</span>
</label>
</li>
<li>
<label class="poll-option">
<input style="display:none" name="vote-options" type="checkbox" value="0">
<span class="poll-number" title="5 votes">12%</span>
<span class="poll-option-text">A Debian derivative (ubuntu, mint, etc.)</span>
</label>
</li>
</ul>
<div class="poll-footer">
<span class="vote-total">42 votes</span>
—
<span class="vote-end">Ended 354d ago</span>
<span class="todo">Polls are currently display only</span>
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<p>SDDM, KDE Plasma, root-on-OpenZFS – simple. On Linux.</p><p>Yes, I'll install the theme snaps.</p><p>Will I install zectl – a ZFS boot environment manager for Linux? Maybe …</p><p><<a href="https://ramsdenj.com/posts/2020-03-18-zectl-zfs-boot-environment-manager-for-linux/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="ramsdenj.com/posts/2020-03-18-zectl-zfs-boot-environment-manager-for-linux/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">ramsdenj.com/posts/2020-03-18-</span><span class="invisible">zectl-zfs-boot-environment-manager-for-linux/</span></a>> | <<a href="https://github.com/johnramsden/zectl" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>github.com/johnramsden/zectl</a>></p><p><a href="/tags/sddm/" rel="tag">#SDDM</a> <a href="/tags/kde/" rel="tag">#KDE</a> <a href="/tags/plasma/" rel="tag">#Plasma</a> <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> <a href="/tags/ubuntu/" rel="tag">#Ubuntu</a> <a href="/tags/zectl/" rel="tag">#zectl</a> <a href="/tags/zfs/" rel="tag">#ZFS</a> <a href="/tags/openzfs/" rel="tag">#OpenZFS</a> <a href="/tags/gnome/" rel="tag">#Gnome</a> <a href="/tags/gdm/" rel="tag">#GDM</a></p>
Edited 354d ago
<p>Okay <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> question...</p><p>Is it fast and easy to setup something like <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a> with something like <a href="/tags/wine/" rel="tag">#wine</a> to run <a href="/tags/powerpoint/" rel="tag">#PowerPoint</a> and does it play nice with DropBox and Zoom?</p><p>I need to use all three of those pieces of software and no I can't switch from PowerPoint or Zoom for the next several months.</p><p>And I need it to just work without pain for some important Zoom meetings I have in a few days. </p><p>This is all because Dell installed some bad drivers on Windows 10 🙄🙄</p>
<p>On the 9th of August, join us in <a href="/tags/noida/" rel="tag">#Noida</a> as we celebrate<br>• the 21st birthday of <a href="/tags/openstreetmap/" rel="tag">#OpenStreetMap</a><br>• the release of <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> <a href="/tags/trixie/" rel="tag">#Trixie</a></p><p>In collaboration with <span class="h-card"><a href="https://pleroma.debian.social/users/debianindia" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>debianindia</span></a></span> and <span class="h-card"><a href="https://mas.to/@fossunited" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>fossunited</span></a></span> </p><p>More details at <a href="https://wiki.debian.org/ReleasePartyTrixie/India/Noida" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="wiki.debian.org/ReleasePartyTrixie/India/Noida"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">wiki.debian.org/ReleasePartyTr</span><span class="invisible">ixie/India/Noida</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/osm/" rel="tag">#OSM</a> <a href="/tags/india/" rel="tag">#India</a> <a href="/tags/delhi/" rel="tag">#Delhi</a></p>
Edited 242d ago
<p>Debian thanks all the contributors building and nurturing the FOSS ecosystem and wishes everyone a very happy "I Love Free Software Day" <a href="https://fsfe.org/activities/ilovefs/" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>fsfe.org/activities/ilovefs/</a> <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a> <a href="/tags/ilovefs/" rel="tag">#ilovefs</a> <a href="/tags/02/" rel="tag">#02</a></p>
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