

Just a word of caution…
I try to upgrade 1 (of a similar group) manually first to check it’a not foobarred after the update, then crack on with the rest. Testing a restore is 1 thing, but restoring the whole system…?


Just a word of caution…
I try to upgrade 1 (of a similar group) manually first to check it’a not foobarred after the update, then crack on with the rest. Testing a restore is 1 thing, but restoring the whole system…?


Yeah, ok, fair enough. That probably answers all the questions…
Virgin will be throttling, AND having internal problems 🙂
Be interesting if your VPS hop also gets throttled…


VPN throttling: are you sure your DNS traffic’s going through the VPN tunnel and going to an external server, not your ISP’s?
If they can see where you’re browsing, maybe that’s triggered something.
If it was only for a few hours though, maybe they just had an internal problem?
Give them a call and ask them. And if they’re doing something weird (throttling traffic), they should be able to tell you why… and consider leaving them if they’re not providing the service you need.


True, but, I don’t need docker or a VMM to run it in, or as many resources. Backups are easier, updates are predictable… and are adverts now a thing with the AIO?
I come from the early days when every NC point release needed a lot of tweaks to even make it work… hence the AIO was born from that mess.
I just found a simpler solution…


That paper calendar must be rigid now with all that white paint 🤭


Do it.
I found no-one used the NC interface for anything, so it was a lot of maintenance for no reason.
I replaced NC with Radicale and syncthing


Radicale is also really easy to setup as a “normal” package… I have it running on a Pi.
Such a small, simple system, it’s great.


Funny that the name dropping of Chrome in the link summary implies Firefox users are safe.
Well, the article does actually state that in the text…


when both are available it’s hard to decide.
It’s easy to decide: AUR (only)
Personally, I use pacman for as much as I can, then dip into yay for anything else.
Another reason to leave Windows…
(I know, my comment doesn’t address the core issue)


Keys, paperclips and coins… they kinda work their way towards the PCB and short out crtitical things


Coils & curves?
From my viewpoint it looks like balance and counter balance 🙂
Are those all balanced, pivoting around a power outlet?


I’m preferring 1 thing for 1 job, so if / when a dongle fails or I want to change something, then I’m only affecting 1 protocol / group of devices.
I don’t use docker, etc, so for me, if it’s in the normal Arch repos or AUR then I don’t need to think about it until there’s a
.pacnewfile to look atThen, it’s just the odd git pull on literally 2 devices.
All organised by ansible…
(well except the
.pacnew, but I think it’s nice to keep in touch with the packages)