This is pretty normal in military / federal positions. It is well known and a part of training that you are responsible for returning overpayments.
Unbelievable. What would we do? Hand it over to a non-profit akin to the Linux Foundation so we can have a flourishing ecosystem of technologies sharing momentum while branching out into their own flavors and augmentations? All of that, for what! To serve a public good via most common piece of software used on a day to day basis? Madness!
The age of the great north Korean porn revolution is upon us
I think if you're assassinating a public figure you're a little past caring about what's "allowed"
Debian + Nix + Flatpak is a pretty sweet combo!
Relevant :)
I think the real question is what do you want to learn?
If you want to learn Linux for a job I would recommend Fedora. The packages are up there with Arch in terms of being close to latest. SELinux, a security architecture, is standard in the RHEL ecosystem (Fedora is the testing distro for Red Hat Enterprise Linux). DNF gets a lot of flak for being slow but with the recent update to DNF5 in Fedora 41 there are noticeable improvements.
If you want to learn what's going on under the hood in traditional Linux, use Arch.
If you want guard rails so you don't break things, use an immutable distro like Bluefin.
Heck, distro hop for a bit so you learn how to answer this question for yourself :) -- you can check out separate home partitions so you can change distros, or install multiple, without getting rid of all of your settings / data. Use nix package manager and home-manager so you can reproduce your configs when you distro hop.
Don't think too hard about the DE. You can always switch to a new one. I generally keep 2-3 DEs on my system at a time so I can change it up at the login screen if the mood strikes. It takes all of 15 min to get set up for an absolute newbie.
That's a great point. I suppose Framework wasn't necessarily the one to push for this.
The fact that they are fine with holding approval authority implicates them in my mind. Though, I guess this is tougher when form factors are open source and all parts are very easy to find. DeepComputing can kind of make whatever they want (with whatever restrictions they want) and naturally be associated with Framework's brand.
Any external sharing of user experiences of the Early Access Program must be approved by DeepComputing and Framework before publication.
Yikes. I like Framework (have had one for a few years now) but this is not what I expect from them at all.
Once they drop this requirement and get to normal (removable) memory and storage I'd pay double this though!
Oh even better! Thanks for the note
Agreed. The only way I see this helping the community is if folks post the outcome of discussions in a searchable way, like on the official Discourse. Most don't.
If you're determined to join a group like this, the Nix/NixOS Matrix is a better option since it's already 4k+ strong.
I've heard that a lot of custom domains get filtered by tech giants. Have you experienced any problems like that? I agree it would be nice and self hosting it is pretty straightforward.
This offers no features over the embedded calendar in the mail app. Not even widgets.
I agree, the CLI is good enough. Thanks for the note about the GUI package manager! I hadn't heard about that.
I also second the positive interactions. Mine have been almost exclusively positive. I've come across a few no effort "RTFM, idiot" attitudes but it's rarer on Nix forums and repos than I've seen elsewhere.
AlternativeTo: a resource I wish I would have had when I started using Linux
AlternativeTo is a site I use quite a bit. Personally I use it when I get fed up with an Android app having too many ads / creepy network behavior or want to find a self-hostable version of a freemium service.
It has filters for free, open source, platform type, etc. From my understanding it's all crowd sourced, so if you disagree with a rating put in a vote! Sharing this in hopes that others find it as useful as I do.
If you know of similar or better resources I would love to hear about them.
Edit: many people are noting that the comments and reviews are out of date. I agree! Despite that I still find it to he useful. It would be great if this little bit of visibility gets more folks engaged over there to improve it.
USB-C Multi-Device Charger Recommendations?
I've been playing around with my home office setup. I have multiple laptops to manage (thanks work) and a handful of personal devices. I would love to stop playing the "does this charging brick put out enough juice for this device" game.
I have:
- 1x 100W Laptop
- 1x 60W Laptop
- 1x 30W Router
- 1x 30W Phone
- 2x raspberry pis
I've been looking at multi-device bricks like this UGREEN Nexode 300W but hoped someone might know of a similar product for less than $170.
Saving a list of products that are in the ballpark below, in case they help others. Unfortunately they just miss the mark for my use case.
- Shargeek S140: $80, >100W peak delivery for one device, but drops below that as soon as a second device is plugged in.
- 200W Omega: at $140 it's a little steep. Plus it doesn't have enough ports for me. For these reasons, I'm out.
- Anker Prime 200W: at $80 this seems like a winner, but
they don't show what happens to the 100W outputs when you plug in a third (or sixth) device. Question pending with their support dept.it can't hit 100W on any port with 6 devices plugged in. - Anker Prime 250W: thanks FutileRecipe for the recommendation! This hits all of the marks and comes in around $140 after a discount. Might be worth the coin.
If you've read this far, thanks for caring! You're why this corner of the internet is so fun. I hope you have a wonderful day.
Beeper Self Hosting
A tool for running self-hosted bridges with the Beeper Matrix server. - beeper/bridge-manager
Is anybody self hosting Beeper bridges?
I'm still wary of privacy concerns, as they basically just have you log into every other service through their app (which as I understand is always going on in the closed source part of Beeper's product).
The linked GitHub README also states that the benefit of hosting their bridge setup is basically "hosting Matrix hard" which I don't necessarily believe.