What process do you use to sign your binaries?
I’m a nerd, doing nerd things…
What process do you use to sign your binaries?
Lazygit. Nice TUI for git.
Hopefully it’ll run Linux with no issues.
I have 4 spinny disks in my NAS. The tile the server is sitting on makes more noise than the drives. I wouldn’t worry about it too much.
I liked having them all in the same file - easier to keep everything in sync. I also had “dependency” links to keep things starting in order.
7 of 9. She’s on the Fediverse…
I used to do this when on Windows too: C was for the OS and apps, D was for user data. The same principle here - separating OS from data is a game changer - and even easier on Linux I think. Makes it so easy to wipe a partition and try something new.
At first glance, I thought that was the backside of someone bending over. I’m sure I’m the only one though. Right?
They claim to (and some aren’t horrific), but they don’t work as well. So far, nothing beats Mona and Mastodon - hands down.
I ran a Pleroma instance for a while. I gave up because the application support wasn’t great. Now I run a mastodon instance - and the app support is much better. The resource usage is a non-issue.
If a pilot must retire at 65 for fear they will kill 200-300 people, you sure as hell should have to retire when 330 million lives are on the line.
I just thank the gods that I can download and install Firefox via chocolatey.
I run my own Mastodon instance. My wife uses it too. It is open to my family, but none have moved this way yet - more of a “not using mastodon” than “not your mastodon”. Easy to link to other instances. I use a docker based instance of mastodon with the db and nginx running on an Azure VM running Ubuntu. Easy to patch, and update. I spent days getting it running right (learning, tearing down, rinse, repeat) but now it is a few minutes a month maintaining. Let me know if you have any questions.
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