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Raspberry PI
Raspberry PI
who is advertising Linux
Enterprise, Lenovo, Canonical group, Dell, IBM/Red Hat
The usual suspects
The fractal Terra is small but not stackable; easy access to everything but sata drives. In the past I used a Sugo 13 but the psu takes up most of the space.
Lian li and Asus have some good micro atx options like the tu150 or the ap201. Overall small compact machines that stack are best suited to 1U/2U rackmounts in my experience
They’re a new company so we’ll still have to see if they’re as reliable as some older machines. Providing parts and usb c adapters helps with longevity I guess
Forbes isn’t great but their overall philosophy means it should last at least 10 years if you take care of it. I have an acer c720 with Debian that still kinda works
Remote play together and steams controller management are two separate things.
RPT creates a tunnel to make everyone appear in the same session.
For controllers, especially in Linux check that you have the correct settings enabled eg. Enable PlayStation/nintendo support vs the default Xbox emulation.
I’ve personally never had any issues with RPT and controller settings after checking the controller is setup properly in Steam.
In my experience I’m actually impressed with the ‘full simulation’ performance so far.
Absolutely it was released far too early, I’m looking forward to feature parity with CS1 and getting it to a proper state.
NextDNS.io is free to start and works great for this
How is this any different than skeletons and using up ansible, salt or chef? Also hear a lot about Nix but don’t see the OS of NixOS
Removed by mod
Since Google is both the service provider for the client browser and also provides last-mile internet services; they would fit the definition of a supposed neutral ISP but also neutral for applications and services further up the OSI stack.
Net neutrality is not just a service provider concept but has been viewed this way in the cases service providers have tried to game the system. It also encompasses the concept of an open internet; the neutrality of data is data and presentation, or lack of to the client is defined by open standards, not the desires of any one party.
The web is based on open standards; that’s what made it universally accessible. How does limiting access based on how you access the web benefit anyone?
For anything not Steam, Lutris.
Lutris because it handles both and more.
The cost of doing business means you should buy a license for each user that needs an account.
https://www.linode.com/community/questions/22605/can-i-set-up-a-smtp-relay-server-on-linode
Gnome terminal supports everything you’re asking for
https://help.gnome.org/users/gnome-terminal/stable/pref.html.en
TLDR, no
The cpu isn’t the only piece of the puzzle. 6.5 kernel is only just released, and at least just supported on Debian testing.
It’s not crazy that you haven’t setup any power saving profiles, or that the kernel doesn’t natively support these new chips and architecture.
Which mouse? HID is all but guaranteed to work on linux