

If your machine is a Tuxedo laptop, this thread might interest you. Seems as though this user was hitting thermal limits and their laptop would freeze/poweroff to keep from dying.


If your machine is a Tuxedo laptop, this thread might interest you. Seems as though this user was hitting thermal limits and their laptop would freeze/poweroff to keep from dying.


Run your workload in a guest VM and limit its resources to whatever you desire. You can also consider c-groups if you already know which processes are causing all of the trouble.


Ignoring what users want is the tradition in GNOME and yeah ofcourse Fedora is gonna do whatever RedHat/IBM tells them to do including push AI-slop.


I would look at these things first.


This project has never been more relevant in light of the recent acceleration of enshitification over at Microslop. Might be time to donate a few bucks.


It should but you can test that assumption by trying to ping any other device on the non-guest wifi. (and try ping in the other direction)


Do not, under any circumstances, conduct any private business on it. What isn’t being logged by Microsoft and shared with your employer, advertisers, various governments will be screenshot’d every n seconds. Additionally, I highly suggest, if you haven’t already, to setup a separate VLAN for this device if you ever bring it home and connect it to your home network. Defender absolutely does passive sniffing and active network scanning now. It will also be collecting and logging visible SSIDs as well. Enjoy!


Wireguard should be the default here. The rest is just networking configuration implemented in both routing and firewall. I never understood why people use Tailscale, like why would you intentionally pay someone to be man in the middle of your virtual private network? Twingate I am not familiar with.


OpenRC seems to work pretty seamlessly on Gentoo. Just throwing that out there.


So … device attestation … the same shit coming from Google, Microslop and others. At least Poettering is consistent with his shit ideation.


You might have too many old kernels installed. This would potentially fill up the /boot partition. One way to check this is:
df -h
Look for the line indicating space left for /boot.
You can then get a list of the installed kernels with:
dpkg --get-selections | grep -v deinstall | grep linux-image
If you need to remove old ones, use uname -a to identify the running kernel (should be the latest version if you’ve rebooted after the last kernel update) then remove all of the older kernel packages with:
sudo apt remove -y linux-image-amd64-xxxx
More generally speaking, I think that sudo apt autoremove should leave you with only the latest 2 kernel packages by default.


That’s weird. I was looking at this docs page and assumed that USB is how the update actually happened.


If all you need is basic paint-link functionality on Linux then you might like drawing. It is already in the Debian repositories too.


Evolution isn’t perfect but it works reasonably well. Has email, tasks, calendar, contacts and notes built-in. What else do you really need?
Dude … just install Debian(stable or testing) and then distro-surf using VMs in kvm/qemu. Just reading this all makes me tired for you.


Use a windows VM and then make sure that your hypervisor is properly passing thru the USB device/connection to the monitor to the windows guest vm. Not sure why you’d need a windows host OS for this.


I’d stick to reading the alpine wiki yourself vs “asking AI”. You will actually learn things that way.


I donate to Signal. I intend to increase my contributions to other open source (Linux) projects this year though. I expect them to need it more than ever soon.


Raspberry Pi’s are full of possibilities, even old ones. Here is what I’d do.
It was supposed to be a pi-hole but was never able to get the dns forwarding to work on my modem.
Not sure what you mean here but there is no reason that any modem or WAN box ever really needs to involved with a pi-hole. You can set the IP to use for DNS lookups on each host by hand… OR you can turn off DHCP services on the modem run that off of the PI, which then sends the IP of the PI/PiHole for DNS as part of the DHCP lease to each client.
At any rate, ideas for it:
There are so many more ideas like weather stations, news feeds, little web services for whatever.
Some upgrades require human input like when core service config files upgrades are offered. (ex. would like to update /etc/samba/smb.conf with the maintainer’s version or keep your own?)
In my experience this can occasionally cause background apt processes to hang while they wait for your answer to that kind of question. There is a debconf trick you can try. debian_frontend=noninteractive. You can create your own cronjob, as root, that runs a script with this export command, apt update, then apt dist-upgrade -y.