I think you would also need an initial run process such as systemd or the sysV runlevels.
So what is the general consensus on package management these days on Debian based distributions? I may be old school by relying only on APT (DEB) for my Linux machines, and never really got into Snap, Flatpak, and what not. Is APT still most used? Or is there a significant movement towards Snap or something else. What I hated when I looked at Snap the last time is that distributions come with different concurrent architectures on package management, which from a point of view of organizing you system just doesn't make sense. A difference between package management (APT/Flat/Snap) on the one hand and service management (Docker, k8, ...) on the other hand I understand.
What the article does not mention, if the immigrant work force if working against lower wages, compared to native work force. Cheap labor obviously will be a strong rising force.
So, is the writing staff getting replaced by ChatGPT or any other LLM?
Are we sure it is the same thing? Alien-in-the-middle attack succeeded... 😁
cooling down your hands now don't you?
There is also a very clear upwards trend I would say 😁
Indeed, which now backfires heavily so it seems. Interesting to see what will come out of this.
Hosting an email server is pretty sure a magnet for half the Chinese IP range.... So I would refrain from hosting that myself.
Unmonitored, it will slowly evolve into V'ger now!
Started out with lastpass many years ago, until it was bought by logmein. Have been using Bitwarden since.
baca is a terminal based epub reader. Quite nice.