Oh, for sure. I was responding to the guy saying "I couldn’t figure out the cause, and there was many unnecessary things coming with the OS"
Doesn't seem like there's that much extra with Endeavour vs Arch.
Oh, for sure. I was responding to the guy saying "I couldn’t figure out the cause, and there was many unnecessary things coming with the OS"
Doesn't seem like there's that much extra with Endeavour vs Arch.
Isn't it just an installer, welcome app, theming, and maybe an Nvidia driver helper?
I don't think Endeavour really adds that much, but maybe my perception has been wrong this whole time 🤷
I didn't want to click the article. Then I realized the ironic hypocrisy and deleted my comment, lol.
Guess it federated before I got to it.
I can't find the video, but I remember someone at Ableton said they pretty much had the same view of Live piracy. If someone pirates it, they weren't willing to spend the money on it, but perhaps they will be willing to in the future.
I personally combine lower end NAS boxes with 4x4 mini PC's. I like the separation of concerns, as well as the tiny footprint.
Honestly, I enjoy the humorous colour names.
Not sure that transmission supports it, but other torrent clients (qbitorrent, deluge) allow binding the torrent client to your VPN interface. That way, you literally can't torrent on anything but your VPN connection (even if a killswitch fails/the VPN isn't running)
Most people want stability (low change) for servers. Arch is typically run where plentiful software updates are welcome. It's not that you can't/shouldn't use Arch for servers, but it isn't the most conventional suggestion.
Arch, Fedora, and Debian. Think I'm going to start phasing out Fedora though.
What makes Debian a pain to use on servers?