What issues were you having with hyperland? I’ve been running awesomewm for about a decade and I know my days on x11 are numbered. Hyperland was going to be my next trial.
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Dran@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How often do you update software on your servers?English
23·10 days agoUnattended-upgrade does security-only patching once every 4 hours (in rough sync with my local mirror)
Full upgrades are done weekly, accompanied by a reboot
I find that the split between security patching and feature/bug patching maintains a healthy balance knowing when something is likely to break but never being behind on the latest cve.
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Discord customer service data breach leaks user info and scanned photo IDsEnglish
19·1 month agoBack in the day when our community was switching from xmpp to discord, our solution was to write a bot on either end that relayed messages from one to the other. The xmpp bot got more and more naggy over time until eventually we put the xmpp side in read-only for everyone except the relay bot. It did a good enough job at building momentum to switch that the final holdouts came over when we went r/o.
You might consider building something similar if you want to make a genuine effort to switch to matrix or IRC. A relay bot solves the problem of the first people being punished by virtue of being first.
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•[SOLVED] Teams on Linux on old Thinkpad (Debian Stable, pulseaudio)?
2·1 month agoI use teams for work every day (calls and dm features) via Ubuntu 24.04 LTS with X11/awesomewm/pulse via Firefox and have no issues
That suggests that as long as you’re using a reasonably modern version of Debian with a sane config you should be fine
Dran@lemmy.worldto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•[JayzTwoCents] NVIDIA Drivers are aging like fine MILK!English
2·2 months agoI would have thought that those people would require the most structure to get value from an informational video?
Dran@lemmy.worldto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•[JayzTwoCents] NVIDIA Drivers are aging like fine MILK!English
103·2 months agoI really want to like his videos but they’re so disorganized. I genuinely don’t understand how he has such a large following.
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•[Solved] What are the reasons behind the “no booby-traps” laws in the US? Are there similar laws in Canada?
311·2 months agoWhat if the booby trap had AI though?
(I’m joking please don’t hurt me)
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Android’s most beloved launcher may be done for goodEnglish
211·2 months agoI switched to Niagara a few years back because Nova didn’t have good support for foldables and tbh I haven’t looked back. It’s very different but once you get used to it it’s much faster than a traditional launcher.
I like the long-term overlapping security release that server-first focus gives me. I rely on it even. My daily driver is built from Ubuntu server headless LTS, X11, Awesomewm. My automation really only needs updates every 5 years, and I get the option to update it every 2. The same script I wrote to remove the esm motd message 10 years ago still works. I don’t know what else people want from canonical.
Long-time (and current) Ubuntu daily-driver here. When I first started dabbling 20 years ago, Ubuntu had unparalleled out-of-the-box driver support for things that required third-party drivers. It gave them an era of dominance that had a secondary effect of “if I have a Linux problem and Google it, Ubuntu guides are the most likely to exist” which kept me using it to this day. Is it the best? Probably not, but I have twenty years of automation built around it and it’s comfortable.
The people that still use it today are the functional tinkerers. I don’t generally engage with these threads because I assume that every user making these posts isn’t searching for the answers that are already out there in previous threads. The paths that lead to Ubuntu aren’t the same paths that the “I use arch btw” people take. It’s a case of the kinds of users that choose Ubuntu, don’t go out of their way to interject that they’re Linux people. We’re just regular people that don’t want an adversarial relationship with our operating system.
Snap, esm, Ubuntu pro, they all get out of your way with a simple command or single line in a config file, and they respect the same signaling they’ve used since each product’s inception. I want a product that is both open-source and financially sustainable, because it leads to stability in my life. If windows had easily togglable telemetry and functional automation I would never have switched in the first place.
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Is a daily-driver computer built on top of a hypervisor a bad idea?
1·3 months agoMy wife and I have both been using this setup for over a year and we’ve never looked back
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Is a daily-driver computer built on top of a hypervisor a bad idea?
12·3 months agoMy solution to this problem was to buy a $180 Dell workstation off eBay and install Ubuntu on that as my main workstation. My gaming desktop is now in the basement and runs sunshine. Moonlight over LAN is basically native, and solves the annoying reboot to switch tasks scenario.
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Your favourite piece of selfhosting - Part 1 - Operating SystemEnglish
2·3 months agoIf you ran a raw Ubuntu/fedora/whatever, you can use qemu/libvrt to run small virtual machines as required. You start and stop them with virsh, define them with simple xml files, and can easily automate the creation/destruction of them if desired.
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Stop Betting on Dildos Being Thrown at WNBA Games, You Fucking Creeps - JezebelEnglish
01·3 months agoAm I allowed to find it funny at an NFL game but in poor taste at a WNBA game?
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Your favourite piece of selfhosting - Part 1 - Operating SystemEnglish
0·3 months agoif you’re automating the creation and deployment of vms, and the downstream operating systems, and not doing some sort of HA/failover meme setup… proxmox makes things way more complicated than raw libvirt/qemu/kvm.
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Your favourite piece of selfhosting - Part 1 - Operating SystemEnglish
0·3 months agoMaybe for the initial setup, but nothing is more repeatable than automation. The more manual steps you have to build your infra, the harder it is to recover/rebuild/update later
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Your favourite piece of selfhosting - Part 1 - Operating SystemEnglish
0·3 months agoDon’t get me wrong, I use libvrt where it makes sense but why would anyone go to proxmox from a full iac setup?
I do 2 at home, and 3 at work, coming from 4 at both and haven’t looked back.
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•‘It’s terrifying’: WhatsApp AI helper mistakenly shares user’s number
9·5 months agoAlso, the first five digits were the same between the two numbers. Meta is guilty, but they’re guilty of grifting, not of giving a rogue AI access to some shadow database of personal details… yet? Lol
Dran@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Nexus Mods' new owners promise they won't monetise the site to death as users panic at the whiff of venture capitalEnglish
71·5 months agoThere are JS based torrent downloaders. That would work for the normies to get files, but you’d still have to find a way to convince people to host files on the backend. It’d probably take a full-on desktop client wrapper with an embedded torrent client but that’s a pretty hard sell for the average nerd if you’re upfront, and probably a harder sell if you’re dishonest about it.

It’s much simpler than that actually. Nvidia makes a lot of money in feature licensing, particularly GRID/vgpu. If they fully open-sourced the driver they would have no method of enforcing license restrictions.