Great battery life and linux unfortunately are a hard task and linux support is often spotty for consumer devices.
Sticking to used business hardware is usually a good start, but you should check for compability issues nonetheless.
Great battery life and linux unfortunately are a hard task and linux support is often spotty for consumer devices.
Sticking to used business hardware is usually a good start, but you should check for compability issues nonetheless.
Used t490 / t480. Can you elaborate on the “heavy limited by space”?
No I’m not catastrophising.
2024 is going to be the beginning of the end of us all
Yeah, I don’t know about that.
I tried and ironically my wrists didn’t like it at all.
I can’t quite figure out what would be the use cases where bcache would excel, except for hdds without cache or systems with very limited ram. Can you help me out with that?
That’s a bad comparison. Without a lock you can just open the door from the outside.
You’re having way too many thoughts about this. I’ll give you a simple choice: It’s either Xubuntu or Linux Mint.
Simply choose by which one looks better to you. Done.
In a year you can look back at your post and decide again if there is anything you want to change or you’re in dire need of a Linux hobby and Gentoo is all you’ve ever been looking for.
That’s a horrible recommendation!
I hardly know anything about the graphics processing / posix, can someone explain why applications need to handle it themselves?
Imho that’s a horrible idea. A large part of content on the instance I’m on has become bots just reposting news articles without any own contribution, no discussion, nothing.
Of course it’s not about centralisation per se, but the problems that a centralised platform does not have to deal with.
Interesting how much you’re able to read into that.
I don’t have the funds to pay for ultra
What’s the point here then?
You can get ad free for less than 1/4 of the ultra price.
OneDrive allows to save files directly to the cloud?