

Generally it’s called “split tunneling” but they might call it something else
Generally it’s called “split tunneling” but they might call it something else
The header is stored on the device, unless you specifically create a detached header.
You won’t need EE knowledge, that’s all abstracted away in silicon. You just need to know how to drive the chips, and they’ll manage the inputs and outputs.
I doubt the TV OS is any kind of Linux. Usually embedded systems run something like vxworks. Sometimes Minix. Real fancy ones run Android (which is derived from Linux, yes).
Embrace, extend, extinguish.
SQL Server runs on Linux. Azure supports Linux. The next step is to extend into their own distro, get everyone using it, then drop support for mainstream Linux.
Will it work? Maybe. They’ll have to make Microsoft Linux more attractive than Debian and Red Hat.
If you’re trying to look like a movie hacker, you need to have experience with your tools. Just learn them and use them.
If you’re going to do that, get the grub debs from Debian sid, not a whole different distro.
Why do you consider this a problem?
We need more info. What model laptop, for starters?
The best thing to do is probably not to bring them at all.
If possible, maybe a dumbphone for the time she’s in the US? Or a second, cheap old iPhone for that time, and never bring a phone across the border? And maybe the cheapest pay-as-you-go Tracphone during the crossing for emergencies.
Your local library has plenty of media.
You bought and paid for the physical copy. I thought that was the point.
Plex lets you add multiple servers.
The jellyfin app lets you switch, but maybe not use multiple servers simultaneously. I don’t have a second one I can add to test.
Actually, they have a demo server. Be right back.
Edit: nope, the android app only lets you connect to one at a time.
Nah, use one VM on each node as the kube host. That’s fine. You’re doing it for fun, you don’t need to min-max your environment.
You’ll probably want to tear it down and redeploy it eventually anyway. That’s going to be a pain if you’ve installed them on bare metal.
Doesn’t seem all that significant to me. If you don’t want then to have your event info, don’t give it to them.
I don’t think jellyfin supports that either. I tried it a while back and only saw partial success.
Docker packs the whole application and its dependencies into a container, hence the name. You can run and delete that application as much as you want without affecting the host system. (But you should probably keep your media library and config outside the container, and use a bind mount. The setup documentation covers this.)
Back up anything you can’t afford to lose. Then run do-release-upgrade
. You may need to use some option to allow it to go from LTS to non-LTS.
They work just fine as media organizers with no downloader at all!
Use cfdisk and just edit the partitions.
Please note that if you do this without first resizing the filesystems on the partitions, you are very likely to lose data. You cannot safely shrink a mounted partition.
Edit: oh you mean booted from external media, not an online system. Use gparted. https://gparted.org/
That all sounds like on-device behavior. You didn’t say anything about it actually being uploaded.