I’m surprised you can’t put /usr on a separate partition. Back in my SunOS days, we used to NFS mount /usr on all our workstations.
Scrap’s cat
I’m surprised you can’t put /usr on a separate partition. Back in my SunOS days, we used to NFS mount /usr on all our workstations.
Probably more trouble than you’re looking for, but I run an Asterisk VOIP server. I keep a couple long term numbers and sometimes cycle through disposable numbers.
Used NUCs don’t have built-in UPSs, like used laptops do.
Links? OP is sharing their experience and expressing an opinion. What do you want links for?
Tiny tiny Rss (ttrss). I’ve used it for well over 10 years. New docker install is easy.
This is why I’m not deleting my reddit posts and comments. It’s not worth making the whole world a tiny bit worse just to punish one company.
So, now we’re begging for low quality content (like this comment)?
Redhat, the organization/company no longer exists. Redhat did those things in the past, and earned a lot of love, respect, and clout. All that is left of that legacy is their contributed code and an IBM product name.
All the good things you said about Redhat should be in past tense. IBM recently laid off tons of Redhat employees, including the Fedora team lead! Redhat is no longer an organization in any real sense. It is only the name of a product now. It’s as meaningful as IBM’s “Watson”. They are only marketing terms.
Don’t expect much investment or technical innovation out of Redhat/IBM going forward. IBM is always going to put its short term (short sighted) self interest ahead of everything else.
The problem is that it will make their experience worse subtly & slowly. It’s a boiled frog scenario.
Good question. I’m on another instance. I can see some lemmy.world communities, but not others. I hope things will sort themselves out in a few days.
I’ll post when I have something worthwhile to post. Lemmy should go for quality over volume.
I’m very impressed. It just needs more 3rd party apps!
Export your feed to an opml file, and import it into the new installation. Your read/unread history will be lost, but that’s about it.