Any recommendations for basic equipment for someone wanting to get into ham radio?
Any recommendations for basic equipment for someone wanting to get into ham radio?
And something like this can be used as the docker server to hold the repository
I’m surprised no one mentioned this if you are already using kde
What type/brand do you have now?
Sleep mode seems to be working well for me on fedora atomic with kde (aurora).
Deep sleep works well and can stay sleeping for days.
Normally sleep rules are working well. The do not sleep toggle in the power menu also works to prevent it from sleeping.
Only thing that doesn’t work is flatpak apps can’t prevent the system from sleeping, so watching a video, using Handbrake to encode etc will all just allow it to sleep if there is no physical input.
I have a 2018 dell xps
The same as for anything else if your phone gets stolen. You restore from backups.
Aegis allows you to make a backup that you can keep yourself on your computer, your own cloud storage etc.
Every OS has some kind of built in vault/encryption feature. Put the file in there. It only needs to be updated when you add another 2fa account (so very infrequently)
Don’t use cloud based 2fa and you won’t need to wonder about this.
Aegis is one of several opensource 2fa apps you can use instead.
Ya I’m using the English 79 model (not the default) voice on a pixel 8 and it works very well.
It’s not easy but they only way to make it all work without creating massive security holes is to only buy things that allow connection with open standards (which means home Assistant can connect to it.
The correct way of doing this is to never interact with an iot device directly. Put all of them on the same network with Home Assistant and then control all of them only via Home Assistant. Then you make one exception for home assistant to be accessible to the other networks.
This also allows you to disable Internet access for every single iot device Except home assistant.
If I understand it correctly, layering an application is no more dangerous than a regular install on a non atomic os. In other words, every piece of software you have installed on normal fedora desktop is not containerized, if it’s software you were going to install anyways, layering it is the same as before (albeit significantly slower than install and update).
But that means that you get great benefits because 99% of your software packages are properly containerized
Kde has a disable sleep button in the power/battery icon menu which I use as a work around, still annoying and yet another quality of life issue that Just Works ™ on other platforms
Has been working for me. The issues I’ve encountered so far are all minor flatpak issues (Firefox not allowed to sleep-lock so the laptop screen shuts off watching videos etc)
You could put in a big report for this. Seems like a small UI bug that could be a good QOL fix for others
This is genuinely one of the most impressive open source projects out there right now. Seems like 10.9 opened the flood gates for all these amazing contributions and improvements. 81 merges in the last 30 days! Great job jellyfin team!
Is this useful for a homelab with a current setup of 1 physical host -> proxmox -> alpine VM -> docker?
Docker is managed by portainer that pulls docker compose files from a git repo. Around 30 containers total in 10 or so stacks.
This idea looks really interesting but it seems to be mostly for kubernetes deployments
So far everything has been very lacklustre. This update just got announced. Maybe it will be better?
I like this version of fedora atomic with KDE
I have an atomic variant of fedora 40 (Aurora) and it just works on an Intel CPU with integrated graphics. I have a USB c dongle with HDMI out and it just works when I plug it in.
I also tried it on my steam deck dock the other day and it worked without issue.
Steamos is based on arch so they are helping with upstream development