We are finally on BST (beer standard time).
I needed to build a spreadsheet today to figure out some cost of fuel I buy over the year at work. Excel here we come. But after getting home and I couldnt stop thinking about this and how simple the spreadsheet need to be, I thought there most be a simpler tool I can use but still get the work done. So after some searching I found sc-im and now Im sitting here trying to learn it but I already wish I would have found this years ago. Also no port for it to openbsd, so might be time to dust off some notes and see if I can make a port out of it also.
After running Alpine Linux on my macbook air m2 for a couple of weeks, it works and the machine seems OK, with a bit of quirks but I really miss OpenBSD. I had my suspicions that it wouldnt go so smooth and it hasnt. So much is different. But atleast I dont have to run macOS so I will take that as a win.
a day out in the sun with 20c, wasnt bad. now back to tinkering with something.
@joel okey, I will have a look at that.
@thomasadam @joel I have been using it since I found Joel's blog about it and it have been working ok for a long time, but Im starting to having problems with the sync not working so Im look at vaultwarden. But I dont know yet.
@joel are you still using your keepassxc & syncthing setup?
So llvmpipe worked so good, that I didnt notice I had missed DRM support when I compiled my own kernel. Just pure luck I noticed it because kitty throwing errors at me. Still plenty to learn, but trying to remember its /usr/share instead of /usr/local/share will be hard to relearn 😂​
@thomasadam things I enjoy so far with Alpine is openrc and apk. Stuff I enjoy less is managing network interfaces + wireguard. But that comes from not using a linux distro for years and sticking with OpenBSD.
First day running only Alpine Linux on my laptop at work. I really miss openbsd in more then one way, but I dont miss the fan sound when I dock my laptop into a 34" ultrawide monitor.