First if all, welcome to Linux. I also found it in my high school/college years and am so glad I did. Things will be weird. I remember thinking "what kind of Fisher Price OS is this?" because Ubuntu was so simple looking back then and I was used to the unnecessary clutter of Windows. There is so much to explore, but I think you are on a good path with Mint. I have also run Mint for a few years and love some of the things it does.
A helpful note: If you plan on sharing files between the two OSes, be aware that Windows won't typically access a Linux file system like ext4 or btrfs and Linux can handle NTFS (windows) in a lot of cases, but if you have bitlocker running you may have additional hurdles.
I highly recommend getting a big external drive ans backing up regularly (like at least once a week). At some point you will screw up and be glad you did it. I only overwrote a disk partition on accident once, and I recovered the data, but I also learned my lesson the hard way. Don't be like me!
I've never been able to fully transition away from the proprietary TickTick tasks. Nothing seems to have the features I'm accustomed too. Then again, I'm on a dysfunctional task non-management spree right now, so maybe when I get my shit together I'll try again. For context, I use a modified version of the GTD strategy to keep track of my todos.
Before TickTick I used Astrid. When Astrid tasks was bought and killed by Yahoo, I thought they were over, although it seems there is a fork https://github.com/tasks/tasks (GPL 3.0) that also syncs with tasks.org. I haven't done thorough testing yet to see what kind of issues I would have using this new Astrid and Nextcloud, but this is the best open solution I've been able to come up with and its been on my project shelf for over a year waiting to be tested.
For calendar, nextcloud synced with Thunderbird and a proprietary phone app (I know... I know) seems to work well for me. My partner uses icloud and it generally interoperates fine. I even have a raspberry pi in the living room that pulls in everyone's calendar and overlays them as a "family calendar"
This stuck out to me too. This is one of my top items for a 15 min. city, not because I visit bars frequently, but because when I do visit, or when my neighbors visit, I'd like it to be a car-free trip.
I chose Nextcloud as my first project because I had an interest in the project for a while. I did an old fashioned install which I later rebuilt with docker. I learned a lot doing it manually twice first. I echo the others. Find a project you like, preferably with its own community so you can ask for help when you inevitably mess something up.
I'm not rich by any means. I've just been working hard the last few years to get to a better position, but like any other American, I'm a few bad events away from living in a cardboard box under a bridge. I asked here because I don't use the other site anymore and I've found people around here have a breadth of knowledge. I picked no stupid questions because this is totally a noob question.
Nextcloud Calendar is where I'm blocking out my time. I use a proprietary task app with a Linux client because tasks.org/former Astrid/nextcloud tasks isn't quite there yet... for me. If I was creating a system to keep me on track today, I would center the whole thing on Nextcloud. The one thing I despise about nextcloud is how it handled locales and formats. There is no easy way to move to YYYY-MM-DD and HH-DD without messing up other stuff like day of the week captions language. The thing I love about nextcloud is how it doesn't spam you with garbage recommendations and clutter and such like Outlook.
Sounds like you ran into a similar issue, my partner was giving me some carbrain talking points and I wanted to balance them with a researched perspecive.
Agreed, a week with no work, no packages, no advertisements, and corporations shutting their mouths for 7 days straight would be glorious. Perhaps more people will understand that the world doesn't need to be how it currently is.
That was fascinating. Thank you for sharing. I'm still early on my self-hosting journey, but a year or two ago I would have understood next to nothing of that. :D
I've been getting this screen for weeks too, on what is generally considered a top quality VPN with a privacy focus.
I guess if they don't want me there, it's whatever. I also have leechblock configured so I have to override that every time I visit the domain. It's a shame that -reddit.com makes Google and most other search engines worse than useless for anything that wont generate revenue for someone. I want the spirit of the early 2000's internet with gigabit speeds. Is that too much to ask?
Soon the globalists will lay claim to every word and we'll communicate with sentences composed 100% of proper noun brand-names owned by multinational corporations.
I'm not sure I understand. Do you mean hearing codewords triggering actions as opposed to trying to understand the users intent through language? Or is are there a few more layers to this whole thing than my moderate nerd cred will allow me to understand?
Same, I think I might give the System76 Darter a try when I eventually have to replace my Xps 9370. It's bad enough that my computer comes with a windows logo on the super-key and often windows preinstalled. Shipping with a non-ANSI/ISO layout is a no-buy for me.
I had this experience on a previous holiday as well. I'm talking single digits up and down. This year I brought the portable 4g router my partner bought me last Christmas and my speeds have been tolerable for work and casual gaming.
First if all, welcome to Linux. I also found it in my high school/college years and am so glad I did. Things will be weird. I remember thinking "what kind of Fisher Price OS is this?" because Ubuntu was so simple looking back then and I was used to the unnecessary clutter of Windows. There is so much to explore, but I think you are on a good path with Mint. I have also run Mint for a few years and love some of the things it does.
A helpful note: If you plan on sharing files between the two OSes, be aware that Windows won't typically access a Linux file system like ext4 or btrfs and Linux can handle NTFS (windows) in a lot of cases, but if you have bitlocker running you may have additional hurdles.
I highly recommend getting a big external drive ans backing up regularly (like at least once a week). At some point you will screw up and be glad you did it. I only overwrote a disk partition on accident once, and I recovered the data, but I also learned my lesson the hard way. Don't be like me!