Remote VM seems overkill if you can just enable "Linux for Chromebook", which gives a sandboxed terminal at which point you can setup and install software like Blender, PrusaSlicer, etc.
It won't be the fastest because they are thin clients, but even modern thin clients do decently for 'light' work.
Reading up on RDP as it's something I do not utilize, I wondered just how encumbered RDP is compared to Spice and VNC. Wonder how third-party server and clients are handling the patent-encumbered protocol.
Do third parties implement an older standard of the RDP protocol that isn't as encumbered?
Oneshot services are for things like scripts that do a thing and exit. Simple is for basic services that intend to run for the lifetime of the system (or for user units, the lifetime of the user's session).
Create a systemd user unit that waits for the network-online.target.
A script something like:
[Unit]
Description=Startup script
Requires=network-online.target
After=network-online.target
[Service]
Type=oneshot # either simple or oneshot, but sounds like oneshot
ExecStart=/home/<user>/script.sh
RemainAfterExit=yes #if oneshot, otherwise no
[install]
WantedBy=default.target
Edit the template according to your needs and dump it into ~/.local/share/systemd/user/<unit>.service and enable it with systemctl --user enable --now <unit>
Check for and kill all wine-related processes and then swap Proton versions for the game again.
Seeing prefix breakage messages with a wine version mismatch is often because of remnants of WINE processes that didn't stop correctly. Steam prevents game launches for games that still have child processes present from previous launches.
Scrolling through their Discord, that particular mod doesn't work on the latest version of the game as it's long out of date. You aren't likely to find another client or server that is hosting it with it actually working. Checking the mod listing page, it just claims untested on latest version.
Unfortunately a lot of the more useful information for the RaftModding ecosystem is all gated behind Discord.
If you're running an email server for more than a handful of persistent users, I'd probably agree. However, there are self-host solutions that do a decent job of being 'all-in-one' (MailU, Mailcow, Docker-Mailserver) that can help perform a lot of input filtering.
If your small org just needs automation emails (summaries, password resets), it's definitely feasible to do actually, as long as you have port 25 available in addition to 465, 587 and you can assign PTR records on reverse DNS. Optionally you should use a common TLD for your domain as it will be less likely to be flagged via SpamAssassin. MXToolbox and Mail-Tester together offer free services to help test the reliability of your email functionality.
I'm currently going through a similar situation at the moment (OPNSense firewall, Traefik reverse proxy). For my solution, I'm going to be trial running the Crowdsec bouncer as a Traefik middleware, but that shouldn't discourage you from using Fail2Ban.
Fail2Ban: you set policies (or use presets) to tempban IPs that match certain heuristic or basic checks.
Crowdsec Bouncer: does fail2ban checks if allowed. Sends anonymous bad behavior reports to their servers and will also ban/captcha check IPs that are found in the aggregate list of current bad actors. Claims to be able to perform more advanced behavior checks and blacklists locally.
If you can help it, I don't necessarily recommend having OPNSense apply the firewall rules via API access from your server. It is technically a vulnerability vector unless you can only allow for creating a certain subset of deny rules. The solution you choose probably shouldn't be allowed to create allow rules on WAN for instance. In most cases, let the reverse proxy perform the traffic filtering if possible.
The game was under exclusivity contract for Epic Games, but they were still allowed to sell copies of the game on their own website. Now that the contract is up, the game can be sold on Steam. Granting players who bought the game from the website free Steam keys is a nice touch.
Ocis/OpenCloud can integrate with Collabora, OnlyOffice but don't currently have things like CalDAV, CardDAV, E2EE, Forms, Kanban boards, or other extensible features installable as plugins in Nextcloud.
If you desire a snappy and responsive cloud storage experience and don't particularly need those things integrated into your cloud storage service, then Ocis or OpenCloud might be something to look into.
Given the Linux initramfs targets a block device as a file that then gets mounted as the persistent root filesystem, I don't think it would really be possible to unmount / and replace the location with a file. Root isn't represented as a file or directory in any filesystem structure and is a construct of many Unix and Unix-like kernels.
Under what means? The target is public sector and the OS to replace (Windows 10, Windows 11) would be a relatively compatible release target. Fedora is a competent leading edge (Wayland, Pipewire, BTRFS) distro that runs as a 6 month point release. I wouldn't see many reasons to not go with Fedora Workstation as a base unless going for an immutable base or a different core distro (OpenSUSE or Debian mainly).
EDIT: Missed that this is going to be immutabe, so it is likely being based on Fedora Kinoite, meaning there really aren't many alternatives besides OpenSUSE's offerings.
You will need either an Intel discrete GPU or NVidia GPU if you want to use HDMI 2.1 to render at 8k@60. The Intel discrete GPUs have physical hardware that convert to HDMI and Nvidia uses proprietary drivers. If you can use displayport, any GPU (AMD, Intel, Nvidia) supporting displayport 1.4 is suitable for up to 8k@31 (limited to 8bpc). A displayport 2.0-capable card with a cable suitable for UHBR 13.5 should be able to handle 60 hz (8bpc) or a UHBR 20-rated cable capable of 60 hz at 10bpc.
How locked down are the Chromebooks?
Remote VM seems overkill if you can just enable "Linux for Chromebook", which gives a sandboxed terminal at which point you can setup and install software like Blender, PrusaSlicer, etc.
It won't be the fastest because they are thin clients, but even modern thin clients do decently for 'light' work.