0 Followers
0 Following
1 Posts

My setup is a barebones Alpine Linux with ssh and docker, and everything I run on it is a container (except backups).

Those I manage remotely (remote Docker context), so the only time I have to log in is to do an update for the few system packages and that’s it. And for that ssh is more than enough

Thing is, a large percentage of internet-connected users might have two or more devices. The simplicity offered by a cloud (be it hosted or selfhosted) password manager is a huge benefit.

And unless you’re already running a syncthing-like service for something else, setting it up just for a password manager when other services provide it out of the box, is not worth the hassle usually.

Haha I remember in 3 the Chvrches song ’Never say die’ has the titular ‘die’ quietened out all through the song

It weird, why include the song itself if you’re gonna censor out part of its title line anyway

A simple start for that is skipping either breakfast or dinner if stricter rules would be hard to follow.

If you eat lunch at noon, dinner at 8pm, and you don’t eat outside the afternoon, that’s immediately a 16-8 IF.

TIL ordnance and ordinance are two distinct words with distinct meanings
Airpods, for when you forget to take your jeans with you somewhere?
Shocked, I tell you
I’m looking forward to the Steam Frame, hopefully it’ll support SteamOS out of the box

I’m using Fedora KDE, and for the first time in my life, an upgrade (42 to 43) completely borked the system, in a way that I couldn’t boot to anything else other than a kernel panic.

I had to boot up a live USB, mount and chroot into the old system, and manually fix each duplicated / corrupted package. And it still caused every now and then some weird issue with dnf, so in the end I just reinstalled the entire OS.

I feel like updates “offered” via a nice and convenient gui shouldn’t really do this out of nowhere - and I wasn’t the only one to report this in the past half year.