KeepassXC. I like to keep things in a physical file. It also supports key files
XMPP/Jabber: pinkolik@jabber.random-hero.com
KeepassXC. I like to keep things in a physical file. It also supports key files
This one + pacman -Syy helped me! Thank you a lot!
[pinkolik@acer-laptop ~]$ speedtest-cli
Retrieving speedtest.net configuration...
Testing from Unknown (x.x.x.x)...
Retrieving speedtest.net server list...
Selecting best server based on ping...
Hosted by SDHD Hosts (x) [x km]: 87.342 ms
Testing download speed................................................................................
Download: 47.72 Mbit/s
Testing upload speed......................................................................................................
Upload: 49.01 Mbit/s
They seem to be synced
Nah, I was only testing speed with torrents, right now pretty much everything is disabled
[pinkolik@acer-laptop ~]$ cat /etc/xdg/reflector/reflector.conf
# Reflector configuration file for the systemd service.
#
# Empty lines and lines beginning with "#" are ignored. All other lines should
# contain valid reflector command-line arguments. The lines are parsed with
# Python's shlex modules so standard shell syntax should work. All arguments are
# collected into a single argument list.
#
# See "reflector --help" for details.
# Recommended Options
# Set the output path where the mirrorlist will be saved (--save).
--save /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
# Select the transfer protocol (--protocol).
--protocol https
# Select the country (--country).
# Consult the list of available countries with "reflector --list-countries" and
# select the countries nearest to you or the ones that you trust. For example:
# --country France,Germany
# Use only the most recently synchronized mirrors (--latest).
--latest 5
# Sort the mirrors by synchronization time (--sort).
--sort age
[pinkolik@acer-laptop ~]$ cat /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
################################################################################
################# Arch Linux mirrorlist generated by Reflector #################
################################################################################
# With: reflector @/etc/xdg/reflector/reflector.conf
# When: 2023-07-22 13:21:47 UTC
# From: https://archlinux.org/mirrors/status/json/
# Retrieved: 2023-07-22 13:21:47 UTC
# Last Check: 2023-07-22 13:16:12 UTC
Server = https://london.mirror.pkgbuild.com/$repo/os/$arch
Server = https://mirror.ubrco.de/archlinux/$repo/os/$arch
Server = https://archlinux.mailtunnel.eu/$repo/os/$arch
Server = https://mirror.f4st.host/archlinux/$repo/os/$arch
Server = https://mirror.tmmworkshop.com/archlinux/$repo/os/$arch
[pinkolik@acer-laptop ~]$
Any platform that requires your phone number to sign up can’t be considered private de-facto
Not really. I’m more of a XMPP user. And I think Lemmy could have a separate field for XMPP also instead of only having one for Matrix. XMPP’s good
I use Manjaro ARM on my Orange PI because I couldn’t get Arch ARM to work on it, while Manjaro has support of my devices out of the box. Since I installed a minimal possible version (without any DE), it doesn’t feel bloated or something. It feels like I’m using Arch but with slower updates. Overall, it’s good and I don’t notice much difference from Arch. But anyway, I haven’t tried it for a desktop station.
How do you make that padding in I3? In my I3 with default config, all windows are taking all the space that’s available
I see. Thank you for such a detailed explanation :)
Hello, OP. I’m currently using Orange PI 3 LTS as my home server and this thing is even less commonly known and less supported than Raspberry. I have spent couple of days trying to make Arch ARM work on this board but at the end I gave up and installed Manjaro ARM which is basically Arch with some of stuff preinstalled (but not too much in the minimal edition). It was super easy to install and run, and now I happily use my Orange PI with Arch-based distro. Maybe you also can give it a try
That might fit my needs. Could you explain in more details please?
That was my mistake when I tried to host literally everything on an Orange PI which has only 2 GB of RAM
What’s this beautiful font?