jjlinux
I do have a request for help with Bazzite. In all my Gnomes I've always used dash-to-dock with intellihide. With Bazzite, I for some reason I just can't understand, when I move the pointer to the bottom to have the dock come up, bazzite opens the workspaces view.
Is there a way to disable this?
Other than that, Bazzite has been rock solid and super customizable on my Gazelle 16.
I tend to replace my drives (if $$$ permits) every 2 to 3 years unless one of them fails before that. And seeing as they are willing to give 2 years of warranty on some of those renewed drives, I'm not really that concerned.
I am, however, buying 2 brand new 20TB drives for parity, which would be my biggest concern. On top of that, I have a mirror of my server in my brother's house over 2K miles away (beats paying cloud failover, for sure).
Sweet, now I feel even more ignorant, lol.
Nothing like that understanding to take the first steps to remove ignorance. Thank you very much.
I was almost crying while looking for drives to increase the storage space of my current 10TB drives in my UnRaid, because of the price.
You will now be known as "the tears-Minator".
Thank you so much for this link.
Awesome. This gives me a great starting point. Thanks so much.
I beg to differ. We made pretty sure that kid had absolutely no doubt that we did not want homework. If it was different for you, there must have been something huge at that school keeping you from getting a whooping every other day.
Those boot lickers 😩
There are cases when different hardware will have different results, even if the OS is 1:1.
Just wanted to make that part clear too.
If I understand correctly, you seem to be trying to get into self hosting here.
If that's the case, I suggest you try something that works out of the box like CasaOS, Tipi, Umbrel or something similar. That way you'll start getting acquainted with self hosting at a basic level without any of the kinks of much more advanced server options.
Every single one of those options provide easy installs for the services listed in the Lemmy post you referenced.
That should get you up and running fairly quickly, and you can then start learning a bit more while already being able to manage your own stuff.
That's BS. A Ubuntu distro would never... Wait, never mind.