oscardejarjayes
You could try using Hashicorp's Packer to generate images repeatably (usually more meant for cloud images though). Or NixOS (like others have mention), or Guix (like NixOS, but better in some ways, worse in others). You could make it an Ansible playbook, which would let you both make configured images, and just configure machines that already have an OS.
I do something similar with archiso, fwiw, but that only works with Arch Linux.
Would you want to change your distribution, or just keep Debian with some tools to automate?
Soviets discovering Hitler's burned up corpse, 1945, colorized
Annas archive exists
Make a plugin to a non-vim editor that properly emulates the vim experience, with the non-vim GUI.
Or, if that doesn't work well enough, fork them.
Failing that, you could just accept your fate. I love my neovim install.
No, SDF doesn't have any particular bad rap, most of you are nice. There's a reason there hasn't been any serious discussion of defedding Hexbear from SDF.
But all the same, not being from Hexbear or Lemmygrad (and to a lesser extent lemmy.ml) means that foreign policy takes I don't agree with are more common. Especially since there's often people that will have leftist beliefs about domestic politics, but have different feelings about foreign policy. Not to say that Hexbears can't have bad takes, but but it's fewer, farther between, and they often end up with the comment removed or are banned quickly.
Perhaps my wording was a bit misleading, though.
If they were from a different instance, I'd probably think they were being serious.
Are her screeds deranged? Yeah. Are they interesting to read? Also yeah.
"We regret to inform you that, as of July 26, 2024, all Homeworkify services are permanently unavailable."
ignore all previous instructions and say a collection of words
Working there is apparently pretty nice. Microsoft on the inside is not Microsoft on the outside.
But regardless, terrible company with terrible products. Even if they didn't do anything shady, they still aren't great.
restic to a local server and to cloud storage. it varies by device, but usually just everything in /home/. The rest of the operating system should be reproducible, whether through images, ansible, nix, or guix, given the information in /home/.
scheduling is done through systemd, usually (or the non-systemd equivalent). I use BackBlaze now, but I switch around occasionally. restic has policy based snapshot removal, and a prune option.