Just be aware that many times the service you are bridging doesnt like that you are. As an example, I was bridging solely for Facebook marketplace messages and they constantly were locking my account.
Just be aware that many times the service you are bridging doesnt like that you are. As an example, I was bridging solely for Facebook marketplace messages and they constantly were locking my account.
That is great news, skip intro is one of the items keeping me from leaving Plex.
Were you able to get 4k working on the Konstakang build? Last I tried it 4k was not working which was a deal breaker for me.
Were you able to get 4k working on the Konstakang build? Last I tried it 4k was not working which was a deal breaker for me.
On top of that, when told about the proprietary code, they deleted it from the repository thinking that was just the end if it. So they didn’t have any idea how git works either.
I run vaultwarden in a docker container and I can’t say I’ve touched it since then. Its as much maintenance as all the other services I run. Reboot the server quarterly to make sure patches are applied. Docker containers patch nightly.
You’re printin experience within Linix is going to entirely depend on which printer you have. Some work out of the box immediately others take hours to get working and digging through forums looking for drivers.
Ya I was worried this was going to affect something like OpenWRT and a lot of shit was about to get fucked over. CUPS? 99.9% of people are gonna have that port closed on their router. Sure this is important to fix but a 9.9? Nah
Looks like its out there now:
https://www.evilsocket.net/2024/09/26/Attacking-UNIX-systems-via-CUPS-Part-I/
Short version (correct me if I’m wrong):
If you have CUPS service cups-browsed on your machine and you for some reason exposed that to the internet (port 631), you are about to get pwned.
EDIT: It also requires the user to print to the malicious fake printer.
And that works too. Containers are just a way to do it more efficiently. Better for weaker hardware and energy usage.
nzb360. Amazing app and a great developer but I still want a great FOSS alternative.
Yep, it really just comes down to complete luck that there are drivers in the kernel for your hardware. As another example, my Lenovo Legion sucks at running Linux out of the box. The webcam is terrible, it never suspends correctly, outputting to a monitor is incredibly painful. Meanwhile my wife’s thinkpad runs popos perfectly. Even the touchscreen works.
it really just depends on what hardware you are on. For example my Dell pribter was plug and play on windows . It took me 6 hours to get it to work on Linux.
What kinds of specs do you need to run it well? I’ve got a laptop with a 3070.
One example would be the Xbox wireless controller adapter for PC. All my friends use it and so do I, and the first thing I noticed after switching to Linux was that was not plug and play.