

@xavier666 Given that Canonical is a British company, that’s not something that could happen at all. Red Hat is anyone’s guess given that the law doesn’t really mean anything to them any more.
#Naturist web developer, selfhosts as many things as possible.
#brony, #nudist, #bodypositive, #aspie, #fedi22
@xavier666 Given that Canonical is a British company, that’s not something that could happen at all. Red Hat is anyone’s guess given that the law doesn’t really mean anything to them any more.
@Emmie @Scary_le_Poo That depends on the ISP, there’s still some out there that will give you one for free.
@walden @Scary_le_Poo Only if the reverse proxy has its own login on top of Jellyfin’s, and even that only mitigates some of them.
@dontblink You would have to write a PAM module to do that
@j4k3 Filtering out everything about them is the simplest way to block anything critical of them.
@Pogogunner At least on Debian based distros, it’s all part of the driver installation.
As for how it works at the hardware/kernel level the iGPU take some of system RAM to use as VRAM, so all the kernel has to do is give the dGPU a DMA buffer into that. The final piece is for the iGPU driver to send a synchronisation signal to the dGPU when it’s ready to receive the (partial-)frame.
I’m going to assume that it is possible to put both the dedicated and integrated GPUs to work, though I’ve never seen this kind of setup.
Every single laptop with a dGPU does that, as I’m typing this now only Minecraft is using the dGPU while everything else is on the iGPU. Everything is fully performant (including YT videos), and it greatly increases battery life.
@harsh3466 That should work, as always with dd the potential disaster is getting if and of the wrong way around and wiping the old drive.
@teawrecks Make a load of dirty bombs and rob banks with them.
@photonic_sorcerer @NONE_dc It’s not something you’ll get perfect straight out of the box, but receive only is fairly straightforward. The difficulties come when you want to send something that won’t get immediately rejected or thrown into the spam box.
@Potatisen @Fake4000 Their CEO being pro-Trump
@AlbigensianGhoul I would recommend @Mojeek as a fully independent engine without any of those “bonus” features.
@andruid @Tippon Stay away from k8s for now, that’s more for when you have a cluster of multiple physical servers. The systemd services are more useful in a single server environment.
The way that works is that once you have the containers set up, podman can save the configuration of them as unit files so they can be managed the same way as native server software. This makes it easier to have them all start automatically after a reboot, and is a requirement for enabling automatic updates.
@Tippon That is a big part of the point behind containers, you don’t have any long term state inside them. Migration is just a case of copying the configuration over along with the contents of any persistent volumes.
It’s worth looking into Podman instead of Docker, the daemon-less architecture makes it more lightweight and secure as it’s easier to have rootless containers. Management can also be easer as being a Red Hat project it integrates well into Systemd.
With your existing server on Xubuntu you may as well stick with Ubuntu Server or Debian for the familiarity.
@nutbutter @noride The container section is, but the rest of it is operating on the host system more like Webmin does.
@reactive_recall Those fees come from the banks and card schemes, so every processor out there is going to pass them on. The only real way around it is to accept payments by bank transfer or cheque/postal order.
@gi1242 The US government, not Red Hat themselves.