Excellent news.
Goingdown
I am a Finn. How I can tell if I am delightfully or some other way weird?
Here I take micro-retirement of 4 weeks every summer, plus one week in wintertime.
Vim + vimwiki is what I use, with session saving plugin. That is all I need. For syncing, I use either git or syncthing.
I think their vision is solid. I just think there are gaps in following their vision. Wheres the “create new empty file”? Where’s the “open folder in terminal”? Why do I need to install bunch of bloatware to change more than 2 options?
On my Gnome Files, there is option to "Open in terminal" and create new files (from templates, which were set up by default on my distro). All by default without any extensions or anything.
If computers are in same network, even with different ip addresses, they still can see all broadcast and multicast traffic. This means for example dhcp.
If you fully trust your computers, and are sure that no external party can access any of them, you should be fine. But if anyone can gain access to any of your computers, it is trivial to gain access and sniff traffic in all networks.
If you need best security, multiple switches and multiple nics are unfortunately only really secure solution.
Luks FDE, and install dropbear-initramfs, configure ssh authorized_keys and rebuild initramfs. Then you can access initramfs via ssh to type luks password.
Have you ever upgraded the Ubuntu laptop? Cause that’s my main gripe with Ubuntu. Server upgrades work, desktop upgrades never did for me.
I wonder about this. I have been running Ubuntu on one of my laptops for years, and updated it several times withouth hitch. All the way from around 18.10 to 22.04 (non-lts, so I upgraded to every release) until the laptop was replaced.
Usually the breakage happens if one has tons of shitty third-party repos and thus will get package conflicts when upgrading. And those are solved by removing/replacing all software installed from those repos and then after upgrade reinstalling them again if needed.
They are still on the ship, and cannot get to land because of the lack of visas.
Do you mean upgrade or reinstall?
I have done release upgrades in multiple occasions all the way from 16.04 -> 18.04 -> 20.04 -> 22.04 -> 24.04. Usually they work fine, but of course back up your stuff first. When doing it with release-upgrade all your stuff is of course kept just like before.
Basically just:
sudo apt update
sudo apt dist-upgrade
sudo reboot
sudo do-release-upgrade
This will upgrade to 22.04. After upgrade just repeat process to upgrade to 24.04
The C64 Mini and C64 Maxi are readily available today and affordably priced, making spare parts easily accessible.
If those work well enough for them, I cannot see any benefit of upgrading.
How to know if you are old:
First thing which comes to mind from DDR is not game about dancing or computer memory, but Deutsche Demokratische Republik (DDR).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Germany