@Soblow A use case I have with my phone: synchronizing RetroArch roms, saves, savestates and screenshots between my phone, my laptop and my local server (among a lot of other shit like DCIM folder, Music, Keepass files, …) With version management for the RetroArch saves and KeePass.
Syncthing is pretty efficient and you can easily fine-tune it's behavior so… Definitely not useless imo. But idk if it would be that useful if you already have a personal Nextcloud instance :|
If you have a slow connexion (like me) and your Nextcloud isn't self-hosted, I would then say that Syncthing is definitely a big deal
I'm currently looking into Arch's Wiki page for systemd-boot out of curiosity and there's something I don't understand
According to the wiki, the main configuration file is stored at 'esp/loader/loader.conf'. Fine, but what if I install a second distribution that also use systemd-boot? How it is handled without file conflicts and alike shenanigans?
Because from what I'm seeing the installation path seems to be always something like generic "/efi/foo/bar.efi" and not like "/efi/iusearchbtw/bar.efi". How can I not fuck up a dual boot in this case?
I've always quasi-exclusively used GRUB since I started to use Linux in ~2007-2008 so systemd-boot/gummiboot actually sounds a bit like scary to me :blob_nervous:
@Dofain Hum… Yeah I think so. I needed some time to wrap my mind about it for some reasons but it looks like configuring systemd-boot is not that hard :thonking:
I just successfully installed it and make it work with a freshly created UKI image so it's cool but… now I need to figure how I can also make it work with btrfs snapshots and it already looks like a pain in the ass 💀
If you're not aware of this yet, JetBrains has recently released the stable version of their new IDE, RustRover.
And they've also released it with a free license (for non-commercial use). https://www.jetbrains.com/rust/
I've just started using it and I'm pretty happy with it.
I'm especially happy that there's a new and accessible alternative to VSCode for doing stuff in Rust
(But I'm really not skilled enough to say if RustRover is actually better than VSCode)
Am I just dumb or signing any commit on git is a pain in the ass?
Everything looks fine on my end but my forgejo repo just goes "Uhhh soooo, yeees, there's the gpg key in the database buuuuuut" :blob_cat_sip_glare:
So, I'm half dumb and half innocent on this affair:
I found out that the problem is the email, if it's not the same between the GPG key and the Git repo, the remote repo will flag the commit as "suspicious".
But how can I use the good email address if the website I use (git.gay) doesn't let me verify my email without an "error 500" when I click the verification link? :blob_cat_sip_glare:
My new Neocities is starting to look really good :blob_cat_melt_love:
I'm now building the website with Zola and ooh boy I'm having so much fun now compared to when I was doing everything manually
I even have a blog in a working state now I'm sooo happy :blob_cat_melt:
(In fact I was already using Zola for months but I was barely able to exploit it's power because I'm dumb and need months to read and understand a documentation)
@freeplay They looks like Vivaldi to me: Corpo but pretty harmless, at least for the fedi part. Just, I'm really not sure I want to see an another company centralizing news sources, tho I don't think they'll become a monopoly anytime soon so… Idk :thonking:
Cohost is really the kind of website I would love to… love. But I really cannot wrap my head around the tumblr-like way to use a social network.
Like, I barely can when it's about any twitter-like SNS (whatever it is Mastodon/AlikeFediSoftware or Bluesky), but while I occasionally enjoy looking at my Cohost timeline I always end up being like "but what the hell I am supposed to post here?"
This totally random thought was introduced to you by the fact that I'm editing my website for the first time in months at 5am and I see that I still have a link to my Cohost account on it even though I've never posted anything on it
And almost unrelated but I'm happy I've seen earlier that the Wayback Machine has snapshots of the previous version of my Neocities (not the same url as my current one) and thanks to that I was able to retrieve all my 88x31 buttons in good quality because I had lost them after a succession of disasters on my now dead previous PC
The only reason I still had the same buttons but over-compressed is because I needed to compress everything for doing a backup of the website on… A fake floppy disk, which was a 1,44Mb img file I was mounting on Windows with a specific software so Windows believe it is an actual floppy disk
I still have ArchLinux installed but it's been almost a month since I also started to daily drive OpenSUSE Tumbleweed and… It's really nice? It's a really cool rolling release and I'm definitely enjoying it :blob_cat:
The only thing that saddened me in the first place is the lack of real "AUR" equivalent but since I recently discovered Distrobox it's not a matter anymore I can just install whatever the hell I want from any (supported) distro, so… What's the problem then? (And it's not like Flatpak wasn't a thing either)
@Deber1an I've always been very reticent about immutable distributions for my personal use, but the simple fact that they can work for a lot of people thanks to all these tools, I find that really exciting for the future of Linux :blob_cat:
(And yeah Vanilla OS looks cool, for MicroOS I never really looked at it but maybe I should)
I'm more and more tempted to install PostmarketOS on my Android device :thinknyan:
I see that mine is apparently pretty well supported ( https://wiki.postmarketos.org/wiki/Xiaomi_Mi_9T_/ )
And apparently it's even possible to install and use Waydroid for the last few android apps I can need, it's looking very good overall :neocat:
No battery infoThe rest seems to function correctly, but I definitely cannot daily drive this yet :\Still interesting tho, at some point I think it could be a very cool alternative to Android(I'm using Gnome-Mobile with my PostmarketOS install btw)