I mean yes, please vote people.
However the supreme court is stacked because Bitch McConnell is a piece of shit.
I mean yes, please vote people.
However the supreme court is stacked because Bitch McConnell is a piece of shit.
Uhm… Yes. Like a lot.
That’s… Exactly what I was talking about. Master of the content.
I am fully aware that the windows search hides things that you are actually searching for. Particularly if they are system preference apps, and it always goes to bing first regardless.
Also, I bailed as well. I use windows for work and school, otherwise I’m on linux.
They want you to use the search instead of a functional interface. That’s why they keep making the interface worse.
It lets them spy on you through bing, allows them to fill the results with ads, and lets them hide system applications unless you know exactly how to find them.
It’s also them gearing up towards funneling the entire UX through copilot for largely the same reasons.
The entire goal is to flip the operating system from the slave of the user to the master of the content.
I mean… Yes? I hate this idea and Roku will lose me as a customer over this, but yes they are specifically targeting screensavers. Idle time is ad time to these people.
I was about to ask why this is better than the docker installation, but I see step one is to install docker haha.
I’ve been running the docker container for a long time, it works very well. It is a bit more complicated if you try and use extensions that require seperatw containers (like setting up collabora), but that can be done as well. It’s just more complicated.
I do remember needing to know how to access the internal terminal a few times, but I don’t remember why. If I think of it I’ll come back and add instructions.
Edit: It’s to be able to run occ commands:
Sudo docker exec -u www-data nextcloud-app php occ “Command goes here”
Sudo docker exec -u www-data nextcloud-app php occ files:scan --all
I’m not sure if this is helpful to you or not, because it’s not what you asked. I just don’t mount them on boot though.
I have a script that requires a unique password that decrypts everything that I actually care about. If that hasn’t been run, then the server starts emailing me every 15 minutes until I do.
The server is not setup to reboot unless I manually tell it to or there is a power outage, so logging in to run the script has never really been an issue. At most, I’ve had to SSH in from my phone maybe a handful of times.
Yea they are all over the place, and it is clearly not organic.
It makes me heavily distrust them.
Ubuntu has ZFS on root as one of the options in the normal graphical installer. I have it running on multiple machines.
It’s not, look at postgres under both DB in the last picture. That’s not just the same writing, it’s identical.
I know you said this is wrong, but my APC racks that look just like that also use 12-24 pilot point screws. They do have a little cutting notch that clears out the paint when you screw them in though
ZFS is fantastic and it can indeed restore files that have been encrypted as long as you have an earlier snapshot.
However, it would not have helped in this scenario. In fact, it might have actually made recovery efforts much more difficult.
It could have helped by automatically sending incremental snapshots to a secondary drive, which you could then have restored the original drive from. However, this would have required the foresight to set that up in the first place. This process also would not have been quick; you would need to copy all of the data back just like any other complete drive restoration.