It does, but sometimes if the system is really out of date I have to update arch-keyring before the rest of the packages
It does, but sometimes if the system is really out of date I have to update arch-keyring before the rest of the packages
Yeah. I agree with ya there, Red Hat screwed over Alma and Rocky with that decision. I can see the utility of those two distros for testing before committing to RHEL.
Plus, if Oracle has room to try to be the “good guys”, you’ve really screwed up
IBM will still sell you a brand new, updated mainframe in 2023.
They’re also in the open source software space (IBM owns Red Hat, a software company that has a lot of projects for Linux. Red Hat has their own Linux distro too)
I run Outline. Originally I was looking for a drop in Notion replacement, but it isn’t quite there yet.
I still run it because the stack was a bear to deploy, so I wanna get some use out of the product (Redis, Outline itself, Postgres, and MinIO or AWS). It is a good product, it’s just lacking some features that I use in Notion
As a McLaren fan I would be beyond stoked to watch that. Lewis taking the fight to RB in a McLaren? Where do I sign
Can Heimdall use the Docker socket?
I’m not sure where to find it if there is one
When you get a chance to, I would run something like CrystalDiskInfo. That app shows you SMART data (think of SMART like vitals for a hard drive) from the drive. Make sure the drive health shows “Good” or “Okay”
Same. I installed Arch the manual way a few times, then tried archinstall. It’s dead easy
The fact that Thunderbolt is involved makes me wonder if it’s something to do with the Linux kernel not liking Intel’s thunderbolt implementation. At this point I’m reaching the limits of my know-how, so I don’t have much more to suggest
Hmm. Not as enlightening as I’d hoped. Did your laptop come with Debian?
Can you post the output of uname -a
?
Aha! We’re getting somewhere!
A quick Google shows that OEM kernel 5.6 has been reported to cause some form of freezing issue.
The reason I asked about Windows is because I wanted to rule out a hardware issue. My thinking was if we didn’t see any freezing in Windows, it was a software issue. If we did, it would point to hardware.
Fair. Do you still have Windows installed somewhere?
Oooooooof. Okay, let’s start from the basics then. System up to date?
Have you looked into Voyager? It’s basically Apollo (with most of the core features of the original app). I use it as another Apollo refugee and I’m loving it
Try to switch to a TTY using Ctrl+Alt and one of the function keys. If you get a text ogin prompt on a black background, that tells us the system is still responsive. If none of the function keys work, we may be dealing with a full freeze
Man, there’s just something about the body lines of older luxury cars
It depends.
My personal servers are a mix of the two. I have a Synology NAS that I manage through a web-based GUI. Sometimes I’ll dip into command line via SSH, but not very often.
I have two more lower-power Linux servers that I manage through command-line primarily. They don’t have many system resources, so I want them to have as much available as possible to serve things.
Windows servers I use GUI management most of the time