never install software system-wide without your package manager.
What’s the alternative of sudo make install
and curl | sudo bash
if a package is not available in AUR? I am unfamiliar with make install
.
never install software system-wide without your package manager.
What’s the alternative of sudo make install
and curl | sudo bash
if a package is not available in AUR? I am unfamiliar with make install
.
Agreed, this has been my experience as well. I tried switching to full time Linux multiple times. I had already used it on my laptop for years but on my desktop I kept going back to Windows because things on Windows just worked the way I wanted and thought that for some things there weren’t any Linux alternatives.
That was until two years ago I challenged myself to only use Linux for a month. I’ve been using Linux on my desktop ever since and only use Windows now and then to play a single game that doesn’t work on Linux due to anti cheat.
Luckfox Pico Mini might be you’re looking for. It’s a Linux SBC that costs around 10 USD, in a Teensy/Raspberry Pico or even smaller formfactor.
I suppose xrandr can help you here: See the Arch wiki about xrandr
Which kernel do you use on Debian? IIRC support for Intel Arc was added in 6.0 or higher. I am using Proxmox (based on Debian) and I had to upgrade from 5.15 to 6.2 kernel to get hardware decoding to work. Have you checked the Jellyfin manual? It’s pretty elaborate on how to get Intel QSV working.
Not officially. Only Ryzen Pro have official (unregistered) ECC support and not many motherboards support it either. AFAIK Threadripper doesn’t officially support it either but I could be wrong.
I’m guessing it’s the same common issue present on many Gigabyte AM4 boards. The IT8792E (and perhaps others) doesn’t work with the kernel driver. There are workarounds but they make it so that other ITxxxxE chips don’t work. I have a Gigabyte X570 Ultra and can only use ~half of the fan headers with lm_sensors. I haven’t been able to get them all working.
https://github.com/LibreHardwareMonitor/LibreHardwareMonitor/issues/251 Here’s some more info that may be useful.
Edit: or section 6.6 of the Arch wiki link you shared.
For me it was migrating my Arch install from EXT4 to ZFS. GRUB had to be configured in particular ways to get it to work with ZFS and I didn’t do it properly so it wouldn’t/couldn’t boot.
Then I updated ZFS to a version that wasn’t supported by GRUB yet so I chrooted into my installation to switch to Systemd-boot with Unified Kernel Images. Now I still can’t figure out how to add a boot entry for Windows. I followed the proper steps I think but selecting the Windows entry just reloads Systemd-boot.
Maybe that’s why Linux users enjoy old ThinkPads so much, you can just pull out the battery without opening the laptop.
Not using Arch but an Arch derivative automatically excludes you from getting any support from the Arch forums.
Not that it matters since they’ll just force you to read the documentation while pulling your hair anyway.
Care to elaborate? Sounds promising
And make sure to backup important files since resizing filesystems can go wrong.
How do you do this? Just fork it? I don’t know much about GitHub (and alternatives)
Except if you upgrade ZFS pools to a newer version that’s not yet supported by Grub.
What I meant was, I have a Unifi router and was thinking of putting a dedicated firewall in front of it. Does that make any sense or would the firewall on the unify be just as capable? Before the Dream Machine that is my current router I was running an opnsense router with my Unifi switches behind it so I’m not super unfamiliar with it I guess.
This is really cool. I’ve been interested in running something like this. Does it make sense to have this as a dedicated firewall in front of my Unifi lan?
You can always try professional data recovery services. It just depends on how much the data is worth to you.
For charity!
You can find most if not all episodes on YouTube as well. I don’t think there are any high quality versions around anyway.