Yeah, if I lived in the US it wouldn't be a question. But seeing as there's no domestic chip manufacturing in my country there's no loyalty question for me; whatever tech I get, I'm ceding some power to a foreign state so it doesn't matter so much which I pick.
Gentoo is a great learning tool for linux. It's also got a great package manager and lets you truly customise the system to your liking, which is why I stuck around.
Of course I hear you can do the latter thing with Arch, but I don't know Arch, so…
I feel like the word "inappropriate" gets misused all the time. Like it's contextual, not a blanket thing, and people never specify the context they're talking about when they use the word. Of course I know when businesses use it they mean "inappropriate for money money business money shareholders public relations money", but it's still annoying. :P
I tried transferring a ublue based install to another drive recently. Didn't go well. And I wasn't really able to find any info on how to do such a simple maintenance task as fix the bootloader in their weird way of doing things. :/
Geforce Experience had a non-zero percent influence on my choice to go radeon this time around. I doubt this replacement would fare any better, by the sounds of things.
I am no fan of Trumpelstiltskin, but the non-liquid gold thing seems like the kind of dumb joke I'd make. I think that one doesn't belong on the list of dementia symptoms, unlike the other things.
I use the ebuild on Gentoo, combined with some custom nginx config, and a dedicated php-fpm instance just for Nextcloud. Never tried using any of the Docker packages for it so I can't comment on those.
Updates involve merging the new package and running webapp-config to link the files into place, running occ upgrade, and refreshing ownership of the php files. Never had a serious problem with it.
That's something, but isn't half the benefit meant to be storing them in the TPM? Also, that won't help if you're logging into a game or app, surely? Would love to be wrong on that, of course.
Until someone can explain to me how I can transfer, manage and control my passkeys without syncing them to some hostile corporation's cloud infrastructure, passkeys will remain a super hard sell for me.
That's what I was thinking, yeah.