![](https://lemmy.zip/pictrs/image/7e90c2c8-ff29-4d59-998a-1abfa3551de4.webp)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/h1ChnLuBHr.png)
The US government funds it because they use it heavily. I think you should pay for software you use.
Also Venezuela has never really been stable. You could argue that the US made it worse but honesty the problem is everyone getting involved.
The US government funds it because they use it heavily. I think you should pay for software you use.
Also Venezuela has never really been stable. You could argue that the US made it worse but honesty the problem is everyone getting involved.
The first link is fairly honest. Lineage OS does have weaknesses. However, most of the devices Lineage OS supports don’t have a relockable bootloader.
As far as the other link goes I already said why it is bad.
From the a Lineage OS perspective the real benefit is the clean system. The base system has only a handful of apps and it is solid system you can customize and use.
I disagree. Calyx gets security patches in a reasonable time. Nothing that you have showed me gives me any reason to doubt that.
It is just as secure as AOSP with the exception of the bootloader. And don’t try to tell me that AOSP is this insecure mess as it is isn’t as AOSP has very robust security
I have never seen any of those things. Podman is fast and rootless with almost no overhead. It has good compatibility with docker as well.
Also it would make zero sense to paywall podman as Kubernetes exists. Anyway RHEL is payed anyway.
I hope you are joking
Telegram has strong ties to the US government. It isn’t encrypted by default and has a closed source system.
It beats AWS and maybe ever Azure. Definitely way better than Google cloud platform.
Neither is any “cloud” really
I don’t think AMD has good libreboot support
It also isn’t entirely foss
You also could try virtual manager
It is all KVM so it is natively supported
Just be mindful of guest addons. (The are not foss)
Virtual manager isn’t scriptable at all as it is just a GUI for libvirt. You are probably looking for qemu or virsh (libvirt)
It doesn’t work for all cases and it is annoying that you have to wait until creation to change CPU count.
Proxmox isn’t really its own hypervisor. It combines a few common projects to make a OS. It is pretty much KVM with corosync for clustering.
With that being said it is a solid platform. Just keep in mind it is just standard Linux virtualization and for single nodes you can get the exact same setup easily on any Linux system.
Qemu can be a type I as well if you use hardware acceleration such as KVM or Hyper-V.
Virtualbox is slow and the licensing for guest addons is nasty. It is proprietary of course and if a person in a company uses it unlicensed they will send the company a massive invoice.
Those are container platforms not virtualization
I hope you air gap that Windows 7 VM
You absolutely can. People have done Proxmox installs on Debian and unsupported architectures by building from source.