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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)SE
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2 yr. ago

  • I have never needed to reinstall Debian. if sources.list say stable, you'd upgrade automatically. but normally the sources specify the release name "bullseye" and you would change that to bookworm when you want to upgrade.

    I installed Debian potato right after 2000 sometime. Because i was so annoyed by running into rpm hell with early redhat releases whatever and having to reinstall all the time. and I apt upgraded to Debian woody, and following the release notes, everything worked. At the time that was wild to see. Have been running Debian on all the servers i touch at work since. The Release notes contain information about what is changed from a regular installation. So you can follow the new defaults if you so want.
    I DD'd the installation to a larger harddrive, before upgrading to sarge. and by then it had become a bit of a sport, while not being necessary in any way I have kept on upgrading, and moving my daily driver over to new machines for fun.

    If you want a rolling release, you can run Debian testing, if you want stability you can depend on, run Debian stable. testing will stick a bit before release, and then have a period of rapid changes after release, but for a not critical desktop, it is generally very nice.

    if you want to keep your system healthy tru the decades make sure you read the issues to be aware of in chapter 5 of the release notes for each new release : https://www.debian.org/releases/stable/amd64/release-notes/ they contain vital changes you may want to do to keep your system more similar to a freshly installed one.

  • This! Authy is very very nice. Syncing accounts is a life saver, both as backup, and not having to pick up the phone all the time.
    Cut and pasting with a click instead of reading and typing, is so much faster.
    Easily search the very long list of entries.
    Not open source tho, but free as in beer.
    If Aegis had the sync option, i would have used that. But it did not last time i checked.

  • I would assume, you have a standard text. That you handwrite. Then scan, so that the 3d printer can write in your handwriting!

    All that for nobody to be able to read my crappy handwriting ;)

  • Did they choose debian? IIirc they tried rolling their own release based on debian and quickly fell behind.
    Faulty project management is spot on tho. No control of what hw they were working with. Should anyways have started with 5 years of requiering new hardware to be linux compatible. To weed out the worst win-only-devices

  • Debian. Been running debian stable on 99% of my servers at work. And debian testing on the desktop, and daily driver. What orginally made me switch from redhat 7 was how frequent i ran into rpm hell, and how difficult it was to do an inplace upgrade. When i could just dist-upgrad to debian woody and everything worked, with a few well documented tweaks, I was sold. And have been running Debian on everything since 2002 ish.
    It is stable, reliable, and dependable for the most critical applications. Truly the universal operating system for me.

    Edit: forgot to mention that on the 3 desktop machines i prefer KDE. It looks and acts most similar to amiga os, that i grew up with.