theroff

joined 2 years ago
[–] theroff@aussie.zone 45 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I much prefer Librewolf. They are a little more transparent about it is, an independent, open source repackaging of Firefox with Arkenfox(ish) patches applied to it, rather than an entity which signs up for deals with other businesses.

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 2 points 2 years ago

Same guy who talks about woke greenies attacking his "way of life". The more I hear from that guy the less respect I have for him.

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 6 points 2 years ago

Meanwhile I've been arguing with council about getting bike racks at a new-ish shopping centre (a few years old) that is legally required to have one.

(Technically they do have a bike rack, but it's on B2 of the carpark hidden behind a car wash and completely unsigned)

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 8 points 2 years ago

Bash scripts will only get you so far and I can wholly recommend Ansible for automation.

Basically the main advantage of Ansible is that its builtin tasks are "idempotent" which means you can re-run them and end up with the same result. Of course it is possible to do the same with bash scripts, but you may require more checks in place.

The other advantage of Ansible is that there are hundreds of modules for configuring a lot of different things on your system(s) and most are clear and easy to understand.

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 2 points 2 years ago

You could use HAProxy on the client side to load balance apps in multiple locations, but it really depends on the application.

I like to manage my software with Ansible but Docker stack files might make it simple enough for you.

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 6 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Yeah, sorry it was a long time ago (like 10+ years) but I checked and it would've been the --overwrite arg.

The manpage for the older ntfsclone command has it:

Clone NTFS on /dev/hda1 to /dev/hdc1: ntfsclone --overwrite /dev/hdc1 /dev/hda1

Moral of the story was to RTFM 😂

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 32 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (4 children)

ntfsclone /dev/sdc /dev/sdb

/dev/sdb was a blank filesystem and /dev/sdc was my Windows filesystem.

ntfsclone man page

It ran for less than a second and didn't take me long to figure out what happened. That's the story of how I stopped using Windows.

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 1 points 2 years ago

Yeah, too frequent and too buggy. It got annoying having to do upgrades every six months and have to deal with all the new bugs that came with it.

Basically give me Debian-style biannual releases or Arch-style rolling releases.

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 4 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

There's also dotnet (.NET Core) available on most distros which is an open source subset of .NET by Microsoft

See https://fiodar.substack.com/p/differences-between-mono-and-net-core

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 5 points 2 years ago (2 children)

I use Debian at home on my homeserver and a mix of Debian and Arch for my workstations. Most of my stuff is managed with Ansible to make rebuilding easier and most workloads in podman containers.

Personally I don't overthink the distro thing. I recently started using Arch and quite like it. I've noticed packages that are available in Debian but not Arch and vice-versa. Debian Stable is nice because it's just, well, stable.

Fedora has an annoying release cadence IMO. I have experienced desktop bugs in the early GA releases before which put me off. If I wanted instability I would sooner go with Arch (and I am yet to have many issues with Arch yet).

If I were to go with a BSD for a home server it would probably be OpenBSD or FreeBSD. OpenBSD has vmm and a bunch of tooling around it, and FreeBSD has bhyve and jails. I haven't taken the plunge because Linux works and it's what I know.

These days I hear about people using proxmox on their homeserver with LXC containers and/or VMs.

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 7 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Trying to talk to a human at the big tech companies is nigh impossible these days. It's actually quite concerning how unaccountable they have become. If a billionaire can't do it, what chance do us commoners have?

[–] theroff@aussie.zone 7 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Last edited 2014-01-12 12:30:18 UTC

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