As stated on the sidebar,
Discussions and news about gaming on the GNU/Linux family of operating systems (including the Steam Deck).
Is Proton/Wine a tool on the GNU/Linux family of operating systems? Yes.
As stated on the sidebar,
Discussions and news about gaming on the GNU/Linux family of operating systems (including the Steam Deck).
Is Proton/Wine a tool on the GNU/Linux family of operating systems? Yes.
The last commit was made March this year (2023) right?.... That's fairly recent at least by the standard of open source software. Also if the app runs, why bother?...
P.S. Btw if you check the develop
branch, the most recent commits were made last month.
The only edge Adguard Home has over PiHole I can think of is its out-of-box support of encrypted DNS upstream and downstream queries (e.g. DNS-over-HTTPS and DNS-over-TLS).
Steam Deck seems to be the wrong device if you are docking it to a TV most of the time... The SoC is optimized for low-to-mid quality on the 800p screen. The situation is similar if not worse than docking a Switch to a large flatscreen TV.
I have been using immich. It supports user accounts and album sharing. And recent updates on the machine learning part have made it a even more potent replacement of Google Photos imo.
I hate to put it this way because libtorrent
is a wonderful piece of open-source software maintained by volunteers but as is typical with its history, releases are going to be bumpy.
The main reason is that libtorrent
, which is the literal backbone of most torrenting clients, has implemented supported for I2P only recently in its latest v2.x branch.... It takes time for libtorrent
to iron out bugs and stablize and it takes more for clients to upgrade their embedded libtorrent
to v2.x.
Mission accomplished I would say. They have proposed a new form factor, kept on making and selling machines conforming to the form factor and showed the market it is feasible. And now when everyone is on board and the form factor is not so new anymore, it's time to leave.
A selfhost option: Bitwarden frontend with Vaultwarden backend.
Typical web servers like Apache and Nginx support virtual hosts (aka server blocks in Nginx terminology)
Chrome has DNS-over-HTTPS enabled by default. Firefox, however, enables that by default in certain regions only.
Cloudflare has a comprehensive guide on how to enable it in various browsers.
P.S. If you dun wanna use Cloudflare as the resolver, quad9 can be an (maybe better) option.