Players can be expensive, but the most significant reason is probably having to get up and switch discs to watch something else. The vast majority of consumers have no idea how to rip a disc, nor the know-how required to set up a media server.
She's a real feisty one who's only willing to go so far into being "corporate." With the inevitable loss of Bernie, she will become the most recognized face of progressives in Congress. Her sharp tongue and wit, combined with an excellent ability to get her points made succinctly would serve her well in any attempt to run. She's more lively and personable than Harris ever was.
I'd say she has an excellent shot at the White House if she so chooses.
With the insane amount of support he's gotten, I've little doubt there will be copycats attempting to gain their own bit of limelight. Things might get really interesting should they organize into terrorist groups like has happened in so many other countries. Then the US will be one of those "third world shitholes" Trump was complaining about in his first term.
Differing kinda of storage in case one doesn't work with the device being restored to, or something happens that's more likely to affect one type of media than the other. A strong electrical field could scramble the hell out of spinning rust's magnetic media, while doing nothing to optical media, for example.
I didn't mean to imply you didn't have priorities, just that a couple of them seemed to be conflicting. To me, what you described called more for reliability than cutting edge. I understand your concern with getting security updates expediently, but you can get those with less system stability risk using a more standard distro.
I haven't used a SUSE in a very long time, but as I recall Tumbleweed is an official product of theirs. I've not heard of Rhino until now, which gives me pause in considering it - let alone the fact it's not backed by a known significant team. There's nothing wrong with that, but when setting up a server like you're describing I'd rather it not require a significant amount of time at random once I've got it up and running, which is what can happen when relying upon less vetted software.
It's your choice, obviously. Rhino looks like it might make a nice desktop to play with, but I personally would really be hesitant to use it for a server because I just don't have the time to deal with problems at random - I've got enough of those already in my life. Your priorities are obviously different, and there's no denying the fact that even things going awry on your server can be a plus from a learning perspective. I would really be concerned with the project being abandoned since it's just a year old, tho.
I'm confused. Your OP seems to describe wanting something stable and "fault-tolerant," but then you go and ask about an unofficial rolling distro? I think you should figure out what your priorities are first.
The point was he has "X-Ray" vision, which lets him see through solid objects. Ergo, he likely couldn't help seeing them from time to time until he learned to control that power.
It was either push or pull. I've seen both. Some had you push it in really far, but made that last bit that set it really difficult to push (to avoid doing it by accident, I guess), or more commonly you'd pull the button outwards to set it (the button was basically hollow at the end so your finger could go in to hold on and pull).
I think George Michael's Freedom hit that mark like three decades ago.
Became a huge hit (one of my all-time favorite songs). Still hasn't changed a thing because the execs don't care as long as it sells, and they get their money.
I've never used Slackware myself, but it's probably the oldest distribution out there. It's supposed to be stable AF, doesn't "fix" what ain't broken, and is very old school in its efficiency mindset. This means it's indeed not likely to hold your hand through things, but it's also very thoroughly documented at this point, and any help you find online is much more likely to still (mostly) work regardless of it's age - unlike most other more frequently updated distros. It's meant to be reliable, not fancy.
I'm assuming you're joking, but I'm also assuming some morons actually believe this.