Multiple versions, paths, and installs of Python. Using pip makes it worse.
superweeniehutjrs
I still don't fully understand how to gracefully have multiple desktop environments and switch between them. When I want to try something new to me like lxqt, I usually spin up a VM.
If it's your flag, do what you want. If it's a flag owned by another person, you should ask for permission
If you do compile something, it is very easy to make it an installable package you could share. I'm not sure how the repos are managed
I've had a couple jobs with wonderful overtime pay, in those cases my overtime was usually while traveling to places I'd rather not be. More cash to spend when I got home was great. Better than sitting in a hotel room doom scrolling
I chose to set up grafana, mqtt, etc for an RV instead of home assistant. Little more lightweight for the raspberry pi 3 I used. Pulling together solar info, so we could see how long the AC would keep running on the road
KiCAD for circuit boards FreeCAD to import those boards and do everything else
Mint is great. It also works well out of the box in virtual machines. I like the MATE versions for my older machines.
There is a major shift happening right now, and mint is slower than many to adopt changes. I'd argue that's good for mint users, but it may be bad for you personally if you plan to learn about modern linux. Idgaf personally about X11 vs Wayland, because I just need to be able to use my programs.
How does the business of being a landlord not work out to a "yes and" solution? You could make money on rent and sell at a later date. Is risk too high due to the cost of proper upkeep when a unit is occupied? Is it the cost of management?
Although I agree with the sentiment - I am curious how the system works with landlords having so many unoccupied units in some cities. Especially business/commercial/industrial landlords. It keeps rent artificially high, while reducing some types of overhead I would guess.
Framework. They even have a factory seconds store, if you don't need a perfect screen.
From my experience with tailscale so far - there are so many different ways to have it configured well. If it works well for you having it on the host, then go for it. I have home assistant in a VM with tailscale and tailscale on the (windows) host. This works well for my needs and I don't mind having it running "twice"