Yup, that’s the exact same problem I had. And I heard more stories of people having this problem. It’s bad…
Yup, that’s the exact same problem I had. And I heard more stories of people having this problem. It’s bad…
I had the same display failure, but 4 times in about 9 months. It made me pretty done with the whole thing. I only got the laptop back from the repair centre 2 or so weeks ago but I have no faith the issue is properly fixed now. Let’s see how it turns out, if it happens again I’m going to throw this thing out of the window.
Wayland hasn’t been experimental for a while. Both KDE Plasma and GNOME have defaulted to Wayland for a while now indicating it’s ready to be used. And in fact, scaling works better on Wayland than on X11 but I suppose ymmv.
It’s made in collaboration with Framework.
Christmas is religion yes, but Santa doesn’t really have anything to do with religion other than being on Christmas right?
It definitely makes it less interesting and feels the opposite of what Framework wants to do. I hope future models will be as replaceable and upgradable as their x86_64 machines.
Have you actually read the article? It mostly lists problems and reasons not to get a Tuxedo laptop. I’d advise to go for a Framework machine instead, they actually have good Linux support and do not require custom software written in Electron…
Alpine Linux doesn’t have it yet, although as postmarketOS we convinced them of the need and are now hard at work to make it happen.
I personally rent the cheapest VPS I could find and put Tailscale on it. My server at home then connects to that Tailscale network and the VPS runs nginx acting as a proxy forwarding everything to the server through Tailscale.
Besides having no annoying networking issues it also has the benefit that I can move houses without having to update A records to have the domain point to the new IP address because the VPS IP ofc remains the same.
The reasons for choosing Musl over glibc are largely unrelated for choosing a service manager. You can want one without the other just fine.
In general (there are exceptions) containers do not use service managers at all. They start 1 command and that’s it.
Email, Matrix (also with friends and family) and sadly also still WhatsApp…
I mean, it is. RedoxOS is just that. But it’s not Linux and that means a lot of things.
I ran transmission and WireGuard for ages before I recently switched my server over to x86, worked fine?
Idk about Sdkman though, I don’t do Java development, but if it’s written in Java itself I fail to understand why it wouldn’t work 🤔
Alpine Linux: uses musl and busybox by default. Extremely lightweight. Some things will not work
I use it daily, which things won’t work? Honestly it’s “just a distribution”, you’ll have the same experience with it as OP has with Arch.
You can’t seriously call them “countries in North America” though, that’s just ridiculous.
Did you seriously just name Denmark a country in North America?!
Alpine Linux has no default DE, I’m not sure what you’re talking about. It’s up to the user to install a DE.
Ok but you’re talking about Cinnamon. Cinnamon’s Wayland support is experimental sure, but that doesn’t mean Wayland itself is. I mentioned KDE Plasma and GNOME because they are the ones using Wayland for the longest now and have the best support for it and there it works better than X11.