

Fedora works with secure boot, it shouldn’t need to be disabled.


Fedora works with secure boot, it shouldn’t need to be disabled.


Do you have more than 1 disk in the computer? Either way, check bios for a disk setting called Intel RST. If you see that, change it to AHCI, save and reboot.
With PowerShell on Linux you’d never run dnf starting with Invoke-Expression. It’s completely unnecessary.
This feels like you either legitimately don’t know how it works so are assuming, or are making it more complicated on purpose to make bash look ‘better’.
I’m not saying PowerShell should be used on Linux over bash, but your example is not a good one.


Did you forget your ‘btw’?
This isn’t the Raspberry Pi Imager - it’s a tool to build custom images. From the GitHub: A tool to generate highly customised software images for Raspberry Pi devices.
Have you tried the Raspberry Pi Image Generator?


Someone who doesn’t use the distro is saying a tool ‘is a must’ when I do use the distro and have never needed it. You do you, but the point of my original comment was that it’s a valid distro for Europeans wanting a non-US option. Doesn’t mean you need to like it or use, but others might.


So you find Gnome & KDE ugly? I’ve never needed to use Yast for any system configuration. Having BTFRS with snapshots as default makes it a great distro.


SUSE/OpenSUSE seems like a much more European option
Shorthand is hard to learn from and hard to troubleshoot in complicated scripts.


So that means the router isn’t forwarding the ports to your devices. As others have said, it could be the ISP blocking it or it could be a configuration issue in the port fowarding.


Do you have any service listening on port 80? If not, I’d close it in the firewall and disable the forwarding in the router. Also sounds like a bad idea to set your router security to ‘low’, whatever that means for your router.
You can use a tool like this to check if your ports are accessible from the internet: https://www.yougetsignal.com/tools/open-ports/


Sorry, what’s preventing you from adding the subdomains in the Vultr DNS?
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For me it’s that Tumblweed at least uses BTRFS by default, so rolling back to a previous snapshot is a breeze if needed.
While mailspring looks nice, the requirement to create a mail spring ID to use it does not appear to be optional which is off-putting.
power
You’re confusing developers with power users here. At my company, the developers can do one thing well, but are far, far from power users with any technology. The amount of times I’ve seen them get stuck at a simple error message without doing more than throwing their hands up thinking they don’t have permissions or something is actually broken, without doing the least bit of troubleshooting is both baffling and frustrating.


The recommendation to use a reputable email provider host is much better, but if you want to go it yourself the Google Cloud free tier includes an instance with a public IP address. Snapshots are not included in the free tier or any other backup, so use at your own risk - this besides the complexity of email security.


Not at all nitpicky. "it’s faster and more secure’. Well, how? There’s no details provided to support the claims. My banana is both more secure, faster and juicier than yours. Don’t I need evidence to support that statement? Or is that enough for you to accept it?
gfx.webrender.compositor.force-enabled is not mentioned in the article at all - while they don’t mention the specific setting annoyingly, they do mention ‘layer compositor’ so it should be gfx.webrender.layer-compositor.