@worldofgeese
@lemmy.worldThe original EverQuest theme song was mine. Captured the epic wide-eyed wonder of going on an adventure perfectly.
I run Guix System on my personal laptop and Project Bluefin on my work machine.
Guix is even easier to get started with now thanks to the Guix Packager , a web UI for writing Guix package definitions.
Project Bluefin auto-updates thanks to its use of container images deliver system updates. It's also just a great platform to get started writing containerized apps, since it ships with rootless Podman by default and you can easily add new developer tools using just
commands.
I deeply love the story of Grendel. He's left an invisible imprint on me since I was a young boy fishing issues from my father's oversized trunk that squatted tempestuously in our living room. Thank you for this summary! I learned a few things I hadn't known.
For those who grew up with Grendel and now work in tech, like me, I did a talk on mindfulness and conflict in the workplace using the leitmotif of Grendel. Matt Wagner was kind enough to allow me to use his art for the talk.
Hey there, for a very simple start there's the compose.yaml
file at the bottom of my comment here.
The Intel discrete cards are fantastic value for money. There's plenty of folks on the internet who can attest to this. Intel's support story in general (so not just graphics cards) on Linux has been nothing less than sterling. If you're using any Linux kernel you can expect Intel stuff to just work. It's been this way for at least a decade.
WebOS powers TVs now and, from the article, Amazon intends this replacement to cover their Fire tablet line. WebOS ticks all their boxes, especially since apps in Amazon's new flavor are intended to be delivered as React Native web apps.
If you're looking for the GitLab version of Codeberg's hosted Forgejo Git forge, there's Framagit hosted by Framasoft.
This sounds like something on your end as I get cached builds every time, rootlessly even. Podman also supports cache mounts.
Check my comment history for an example of a simple bind mount compose.yaml
I use for developing a small Python project. It's exactly the same as Docker Compose (since Podman Compose follows the Compose spec) but if you're just getting started, it might be a good skeleton to build on.