Great story. I have found that pretty much everyone I have shown Linux is pleasantly surprised with how nice it is. I think people have an idea of it being a hacker person OS with code running on the screen.
Transfered from Feddit.ch as they closed up shop unfortunately.
Great story. I have found that pretty much everyone I have shown Linux is pleasantly surprised with how nice it is. I think people have an idea of it being a hacker person OS with code running on the screen.
You’re welcome. I’m glad I could help out
Frigate can definitely run on a Pi. It can also integrate with Home Assistant which can run on a Pi. As for turning itself off when you’re home, I don’t know.
Put a sticker on what you don’t want stolen saying something along the lines of “airtag equipt.” Thieves want easy targets and if there’s any reason to think a tracker is hidden within it then they will probably move on
StarLabs has one with an N200 but that’s still dated
I know OpenWRT routers have the feature fyi
Some routers will let you change the power of each frequency so you don’t have to disable it.
I know some real estate apps for agents simply don’t exist on Android unfortunately but I do believe most people can daily drive Graphene.
It is stated on the linked webpage. I don’t appear to loose any speed stated from my ISP either.
Since you are coming at this from a privacy standpoint, I’d suggest a router that runs some type of open source firmware such as OpenWRT. GL.iNet makes some good routers with their own fork of OpenWRT which has a very easy to use and intuitive UI as opposed to flashing OpenWRT to a supported router (setup then is very complicated).
Many routers out there will spy on you, make it difficult or impossible to set up privacy features, and have limited software updates for security patches.
The GL.iNet Flint 2 is a modern, fast router and makes it easy to setup a VPN, supports AdGuard home, and setting custom DNS providers. I’ve had it since launch and its had numerous updates too.
A VPN and private DNS hide your internet traffic from your ISP who will undoubtedly sell your data. However, a VPN is a transfer of trust so you want to use one that is open source, audited, and has a good track record of not logging any data. IVPN, Mullvad, and Proton are good VPNs. Quad9 and NextDNS are great private DNS providers. AdGuard and PiHole will block ads through various means.
Watch videos from Naomi Brockwell to learn more about all this stuff.
You could maybe use the service AnonShop as mentioned in the Closed NTWRK podcast
I used to have a SanDisk Extreme Portable running Ubuntu. If it was unplugged, my computer would boot Windows and when I plugged in the SSD to USB it would auto boot into Ubuntu. I have no idea how I did it though. It was my first time using Linux and I followed a guide online.
Edit: found the video
It came in an email.
I login to the student outlook email on the web and use OnlyOffice with Microsoft fonts installed. Presentations and Documents work as needed. I got a fellow student to switch to Linux and he’s had no issues either.
I’ll have to learn what arc minutes are and sounds fun to try new things
Thank you very much
I’ll have to check out the lens more, out of curiosity. I’m sure astrophotography had all types of trucks of its own. I have a 300mm 2.8 lens and no way is it zoomed in enough to get that nice photo you have of a nebula.
You must be hooking it up to a telescope right?
I recently got a Dell Latitude 14 2-in-1 with the AMD 8840U, Put on the latest Fedora Kinoite and the fingerprint reader works FYI.