Woah, thank you for this. I’ve wanted to learn more about torrenting and how music files work anyway so actually sitting down and needing to study for this is a big plus.
Potash…potash is forever. I can never escape my dark past.
Do I need to have elevated network permissions to do that? I don’t have admin access on my WiFi network and it is shared with a lot of people.
The hardware switch looks promising. Are there any decent ones for under $50 out there or are they usually a big investment?
I’m thinking use it to host a Minecraft or matrix server. I’m not expierenced with networking so nothing super advanced.
LMDE is rock solid. I’ve been using it for a while and It Just Works.
I’ve been using a wired Nintendo pro switch controller on LMDE and have had no issues with it.
LETS GOOOOOOO THANK YOU FREETUBE
You can get a used thinkpad T480 off eBay for ~$150. I’ve dropped it multiple times and spilled orange juice on it and it works perfectly fine. No issues running Linux mint Debian edition. Main drawback is the fan which isn’t the most efficient at cooling, but it is upgradeable.
One makes them money and the other doesn’t, unfortunately.
I’m curious, what’s the use case for FreeBSD? Seems obscure.
The journalctl command returns [UFW BLOCK] IN=wlp3s0 OUT=(long string of numbers)
The GUI display settings for mint Debian edition don’t have an enable/disable button on my machine. It shows that the TV is connected as monitor 2.
So the xrandr auto command didn’t do anything. I downloaded pavucontrol and selected the HDMI configuration. It says that it’s plugged in and that audio is playing, but no actual audio plays. Very strange.
I mentioned in my post that I use LMDE. There aren’t any recent software updates that I recall specifically that did it. The TV does work with other people’s laptops in the same port. There’s two HDMI ports on the TV and they give the same results. The TV is a dumb TV.
It’s interesting because it’s essentially the opposite of the idea behind Linux. Using Linux specifically to censor and spy on people is diabolical, but it makes sense why they chose it.
Woah woah woah, there’s a North Korean Linux distribution?
That’s an…interesting name.
The main difference is that Mint is Ubuntu-based and LMDE is Debian-based.
You’re absolutely right. We need to have many different options for many different people.