Exactly. It handles Jellyfin + other services very well.
Linux enthusiast, family man and nerd
Exactly. It handles Jellyfin + other services very well.
I bought a “cheap chinesium” one a couple of months back and have not regretted it (yet). It does what it claimed it would.
The one I bought: Aoostar R1
I was thinking the same. Could be an IP conflict.
Maybe you where on an older Ubuntu LTS. I don’t know which Ubuntu they consider “supported”.
I’ve been running my HA in Docker on Arch Linux for the last 4-5 years and I have never been notified that my OS is unsupported. Could be portainer related.
You didn’t mention in your OP that it had to be debian distro packages. I just gave examples of HA being packaged in other ways than a complete OS.
I could have said: “If you want to run HA from packages, you need to install Arch!” But I didn’t. Chill out.
It is both.
Home Assistant created an OS for appliance like installations.
But there is also the docker images, repo packages (I know Arch Linux has it in the repo) and pip based packages too.
Shipping prices would vary depending on location though, right?
Have you checked out Calibre? It seems to be what that does.
I know it’s active, but most of the stuff being added is not something I use. “Plain old” is a figure of speech for something that is pretty “vanilla”.
mlt was also updated, have you tried downgrading that?
Some stuff in your output relates to mlt.
I doubt they’re outright rejecting any idea of progress. They’re likely just not convinced by what the fancy options offer
Exactly. I don’t mind progress. But terminal emulators that does things you become dependant on, is not great in my opinion. Because what happens the day you only have a TTY to get things done? If you rely on all the fancy stuff, you would feel lost.
So yeah, I am not convinced that I need my terminal emulator to be fancy. But some people clearly are, looking at the rest of the comments on the post.
I can’t see the benefit of fancy terminal emulators. I use plain old Konsole (mostly on Plasma) and as long as it has good history search and multiple tabs, I’m good.
If you connect from outside your LAN, you would need to forward the ssh port to the server in your router settings. If you are inside the LAN, just use the ip address of the forgejo server.
As far as I understand it, TTFs are more basic, while OTF can have more features and glyphs.
That’s weird to me. I have 30 aqara devices and they only drop off the network when the controller is missing (ConBee stick).
Instead of just linking to the information, which may be removed in the future, you could have also pasted a snippet of a relevant section. Like:
If --force is specified twice, the operation is immediately executed without terminating any processes or unmounting any file systems. This may result in data loss. Note that when --force is specified twice the halt operation is executed by systemctl itself, and the system manager is not contacted. This means the command should succeed even when the system manager has crashed.
Already in the AUR as otf-suse and ttf-suse. :)
top
would show you which process is actually using the cpu core.
If Gnome has issues but Plasma and Mate work fine, then it’s likely not firmware related, but rather a process in Gnome that’s using a core all the time. So find out what that process is, if it’s a common thing on Gnome and if it will finish if given enough time.
I opted for the version with RAM and nvme for $270. had to pay shipping, but no import tax (lucky me). So all in all it was about $300 for me.
And yes I run Linux on it. Arch Linux to be precise. Have not encountered any driver issues.