exu

@exu@feditown.com

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exu,

I don’t know how good it is, but for Turing and later GPUs there’s a new official open source driver being developed. You’d likely have to use a more bleeding edge distro to get that.

VR works depending on your headset. Index is fine, Oculus doesn’t work.

You could make a usb stick of your desired distro and test everything without permanent changes before commiting.

exu,

*for 20-series and later graphics cards

exu,

I remember a HackerNews comment by the lead XFCE dev about how KDE was actually better optimized, because they have so many more devs working on it.

exu,

There’s Onedriver to connect onedrive on Linux. Though it’s been a while since I last used it.

exu,

Yes. I use a hacky script to copy them to the right place

exu,

Cron sadly does not offer precision in the seconds range.

exu,

It would probably take someone to sue them, but they would have to implement it.

exu,

I’d suggest you give this article a read. If this does sound appealing to you, go right ahead. If you think you’d be frustrated with having to make all these changes, Arch likely isn’t something for you.

exu,

It’s probably still more efficient to keep a 192k opus and a 320k mp3 around than one flac.

exu,

Yeah, they’re more power hungry, but they’re also way more performant than a pi 4.

exu,

Without knowing what was being hosted, the only surefire way would be pulling a complete disk image with cat or dd.

If you wanted to stay on a similar system, RHEL 9 would be a good option or one of its “as similar as possible” like AlmaLinux.

Other common distros for servers are Debian, Ubuntu server and Suse SLES/OpenSuse Leap.

exu,

You could use BTRFS, ZFS or BcacheFS to do compression on the filensystem level, but it’s not gonna compress video files or other already compressed media.

exu,

I use whipper to rip my CDs. It uses the same database as EAC to verify accuracy, does offsets, cache defeating etc.

Apple's Wifi router database: Surveilling the Masses with Wi-Fi-Based Positioning Systems (www.cs.umd.edu)

Apple’s huge database, which usually records the locations of Wi-Fi base stations to the nearest metre, has apparently been exploited without hindrance: With little effort, attackers are able to create a ‘global snapshot’ of all the location data of the WLANs recorded there. This allows them - over a longer period of time...

exu,

With Mozilla Location Services going away soon, I’m wondering at the legality of using the Apple data to seed a replacement.

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