you can automate a lot of the basc profile stuff in your dotfiles with some automation such as https://github.com/anishathalye/dotbot to bootstrap a new install. it makes your new distro right at home, and if you combine this with github to store your dotfiles, you’ll also have a backup of your environment.
faethon
Does this affect ubuntu and raspberry os releases as well? Since these are based on debian?
Not much gaming time, but i started Against the Storm which I liked.
Looks like a pretty straightforward install! And a fun project to have a personal message space with friends. It includes the ability to launch gameoso you could maybe set it up as a personal lobby for gaming buddies.
I think you would also need an initial run process such as systemd or the sysV runlevels.
This also looks similar to Tailscale (https://tailscale.com/). I have not used this but saw it popping up in youtube recently.
Interesting to see all replies! I’m curious to find new sources as well. I usually go through a set of bookmarks to sites such as eurogamer, kotaku, pcgamesN, ign (sorry for that), as well as checking reddit and lemmy.
What the article does not mention, if the immigrant work force if working against lower wages, compared to native work force. Cheap labor obviously will be a strong rising force.
Thanks! I'll probably start with the main campaign first. Unless there is a certain class or race that may be more fun to play, then I'll maybe consider that as the first DLC.
I am going to give Solasta a go once I've finished BG3. I read that the UB mod is more or less required.
Tactical combat with the D&D 5E mechanics, and with a quick setup for a battle that could be started playing in a short amount of time, is something I'm definitely looking for. For the FR lore, stories and roleplaying I'll stick with (another playthrough) BG3. :)
If you are just looking for a way to SSH into your machines from outside your network, you can setup a more recent VPN or Wireguard yourself. If you have a Raspberry Pi lying around, using PIVPN makes things super easy. You can have both OpenVPN as well as Wireguard running if you want, using the same script. If that is the only thing you like to do, then there is no need to reverse proxy your servers and expose them. Just having a VPN or Wireguard connection should be enough to access your servers when outside of your network. It is recommended to have a fixed IP btw, to find your VPN/Wireguard server easily.
Also, you can leave all your servers locally (and not exposing them) when you can reliably setup a VPN/Wireguard connection. That is the most secure I guess.