I a Fedora user convinced my friend to install linux. Bro went with arch and when asked why he said “I wanted to REALLY learn linux”. And as far as I am aware he is having just a great time with it
AUX, MicroSD, smaller format and big battery was the reason I went for my Sony Xperia 10 IV (budget phone, got mine new for 260€) device.
Sadly their software updates are only for two years as otherwise I would’ve been interested in the Sony Xperia 5 series (compact flagship). I’m not paying flagship prices for a phone that stops updating after two years.
I hope that the EU regulation forcing 5 years of updates for phones and tablets starting June 2025 will allow me a compact flagship phone with aux, big battery and updates for a long time. repair.eu/…/new-eu-rules-smartphones-and-tablets-…
I hope that the EU regulation forcing 5 years of updates for phones and tablets starting June 2025 will allow me a compact flagship phone with aux, big battery and updates for a long time.
I just wish there was a PC compatible like standard for smartphones (and ARM in general). If smartphones were like PCs where a third party can relatively easily maintain 10+ years support, worrying about whether a manufacturer cares to update becomes irrelevant.
Historically I’ve gone for Lenovo laptops, at least for their business segments they’ve been good with releasing updates to fix security issues for many years. Having a promise of 5 years of firmware updates would be lovely though.
The above feels wrong but idk if Lemmy has a formal markdown spec. I haven’t had time to dig into it. This is what it looks like in Jerboa. If it wasn’t 6 AM I’d try to file a big report.
I wonder if he would have done better with the equipment. I suppose he couldn’t just put it on if he didn’t train with it, but what if he had trained with it?
In case you don’t actively check back in the thread: there’s a white in depth answer now what gear the is and why the person answering “yes” is very likely wrong.
That’s not how DNS works. If you publicly query tfk.example.com it’ll reply with a records associated to that entry and that’s it. The client then attempts to connect to those IP addresses and no further DNS queries are made (assuming there’s no CNAME records). If you want to use DNS for that then you’ll need to add entries directly to tfk.example.com which point to your internal addresses.
So, you need to change tfk.example.com records whenever IP addresses change, most likely via some kind of API to automate things, assuming you don’t directly control name servers for tfk.example.com by yourself.
But, as you’re running a proxy anyways it doesn’t reveal internal addresses and the client needs only public addresses to connect into. I haven’t heard about traefik before, so I don’t have a clue on how it works, but ‘traditional’ proxies effectively hide everything on the ‘LAN’ side. (Yes, I know, it’s not necessarily/strictly speaking LAN).
I’ve come to prefer Sunshine as the server and Moonlight as the client. It’s meant to be for gaming but that also means that quality and latency are through the roof and wastly superior to all other similar offerings.
kbin.life
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