Wtf are you talking about? There’s only one birthday song.
Wtf are you talking about? There’s only one birthday song.
Buy yourself a cookie!
I agree, but the question wasn’t about the percentage of cases, but about the possible reason to choice Ubuntu over Debian…
Yeah.
Those people seem to migrate from Reddit, but still carry it in their hearts and minds. 😑
No. The responses are the way they are, because people who gave them are already thinking they joined some elitistic “muh sikret klub!” group.
Simple “eh, it won’t fix the problem, and here’s why and how YOU can help” would be preferable, but no, special elite force of lemmy underground is too privileged to bother.
Thank heavens not everyone is like that. Saves the number of times I have to hit “block the idiot” button.
Ubuntu is what grew out of Debian.
But it’s radically different ENVIRONMENT these days.
Hard to tell.
Whole Linux movement has plenty of classes to take, if it wants to become more relevant. And social skills is one of the most important among these…
Support & community come to mind.
To a typical user/newcomer to servers it’s easier to find some solution for Ubuntu, than for Debian. And boy, can Debian users be full of themselves… 😑
Removed by mod
Yeah. It’s good that there are users who actually take time to explain some stuff, rather than just hissssssss like rabid vipers merely because somebody - oh no, what a preposterous idea! - asked a harmless question.
I find this comment section a prime example of dickish hivemind seething over nothing.
There’s a dude, obviously quite fresh in the ways of Mastodon. He probably doesn’t realize all the nuts & bolts supporting the system and how it all works. He is asking a question that is logical, but it needs clarification, like “it doesn’t work like this, my man”.
Instead he gets “Hsssssssssssssss, selfhost it, hsssssssssssssssssssss, interloper, hsssssssssssssssssss, you want to destroy this place, hssssssssssssssss…”
Get a life, eejits.
Calvin & Hobbes are everything I need, thanks.
It doesn’t matter.
No solution is correct, if the underlying principle is wrong - if you take a sword from a violent man, and give him a wooden fork, he will still jab someone with it.
The principle, the mentality needs to be changed, not communicators, that might as well get hacked next month, or turn out to be snitching on their users since day #1.
The way we talk. The topics we cover in talks. The language, the things we share - this is where the propblem lies, not in the tools we’re using.
This does not answer my question.
So you’re going to somehow convince them to install SIGNAL. And they will continue to use other data-stealing communicators on the same device. Your data and privacy won’t be safe.
What’s the point if they will keep their Whatsapp on the same devices they will use Signal?
If there’s a rest button somewhere there, use it.
Also, check whether it gets proper amount of power - that the electrical plug fits in, doesn’t mean the charger is enough to power it up.
If it fails, then I guess it’s time to replace the hardware.
I see nothing on the video, so can’t comment on that, but could you test the switch by connecting a router to the 1st port and a notebook to every other port one by one, to check whether the devices talk to each other?
I assume that the router acts as DHCP server, and the notebook is set to DHCP address lease, so no additional configuration is needed…
I can’t provide precise answer, since some services rely on HDD performance, while others enjoy big amount of RAM.
Personally, RAM and reliability are two things I’m after when entertaining the idea of a home server.
For example: I’m about to build a very simple file server + jellyfin + printserver + RDP rig and it’s going to be based on DELL 5040 + 8Gb RAM + 4Tb SATA, running… Windows 10 Pro. 🤠
Ah, I understand. It’s an attempt to replicate Steve “unwashed” Jobs’ strategy, where buying overpriced stuff makes you BETTER, DIFFERENT and UNIQUE. Am I right?