Only for yourself or so you share?
If share, please say how well it use the disk.
Only for yourself or so you share?
If share, please say how well it use the disk.
No problem.
Overall, purely technically, no. This has to be the hostname of the computer the Conduit is running on. And it can be in the local network (LAN) with your own name.
But practically, yes. Because you must buy a domain name and point that domain to the server localtion (IP address). And the only global domain names available to register have TLDs :).
So, yes.
You can call it GNU/Linux if the same name for OS and kernel turns out to be confusing for you.
UBlue developer likes and use Homebrew so he thinks it is essential tool so his distro preinstall it to be better and more “user friendly”.
It’s normal for things to implement stuff from each other? 🤷
Microsoft is late with many things too. And I don’t nessesarly think a feature here and there is what makes a good OS, the base stuff is more important.
SimpleLogin is for mail aliasing, not transactional mail.
They are planning a first stable release this year. Give them time, it’s much easier to develop software in first stares when you don’t need to think about backwards compatibility and tech dept.
Privacy-wise CalyxOS is even better in my opinion.
Tho I really want to run Linux phone.
It may be less private than deGoogled Android right now, but in the long run Android is a dead end.
Migadu is great but they state in their policy that automated (non-human) outgoing email like for password resets are not allowed.
Add this repository to the F-Droid app.
Windows is the worst thing that ever happened to computer science.
And I don’t exaclly mean the product itself, but the mindset and habits that came with it.
I am almost certain that the OP was asking about standard GNU/Linux ecosystem borrowed from the desktop, not just some OS that happened to be build on top of modification of Linux kernel.
Linux was ready for ARM years ago.
Sad that we need to wait for Windows to get support first so manufacturers and chip makers start to care.
What I want to do. But the question is how?
VPS as a proxy… but when I point A record to VPS and AAAA record to server in my home, how would the VPS know which traffic to pass and how.
One thing that could help is showing what is going wrong. Do just the icon does not appear? Do some error show up?
But regardless, I see that Librewolf is not packaged in Debian official software repositories (online storage a software packages are downloaded from), so they ask you to add their own repository manually, which for APT case (package manager in Linux Mint) is an overwhelming amount of code to type to say at least.
You say you are a new user, so I can highly recommend that if something is not officially available through simple apt install
to try Flatpak. Official guide: https://flathub.org/setup/Debian, TLDR:
sudo apt install flatpak # Installs flatpak to your system
flatpak remote-add --if-not-exists flathub https://dl.flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo # Adds Flathub, the biggest store for flatpaks
Once it’s there:
flatpak install librewolf
Someone using Linux for years might know where stuff on system is placed and not fear not knowing what a command do and how to undo it. But if you don’t know what is happening, better to stick to distribution provided sources. Otherwise the equivalent would be like typing some commands in Windows to change registry keys :). I think Librewolf should recommend Flatpak by default instead.
Sorry if this is too much info, just tried to explain things a little more than usual.
Yes, your server needs to be full domain name. Otherwise, when typing a username (like @myusername:myserver.com) other servers would need to know where that myserver.com is.
Conduit needs to know it’s domain Because it is part of usernames.