

Canonical Landscape, RedHat Satellite, SUSE Manager and Foreman to name a few.
I think Foreman is the only one not tied to an Enterprise subscriptions and supporting more than one distro, but I could be wrong.
Canonical Landscape, RedHat Satellite, SUSE Manager and Foreman to name a few.
I think Foreman is the only one not tied to an Enterprise subscriptions and supporting more than one distro, but I could be wrong.
Have a look at niri, then. I still did not do the transition from Gnome, but niri looks very promising.
There is glsa-check
for you.
I daily-drive Gentoo on my main rig. A binary-repository exists now. You can still decide where you want different use-flag settings and save a lot compile time.
Only for machines I don’t actively use (servers) or rarely use, I have Debian stable installed.
Seriously, I want that purple fur suit now. Where can I buy one?
I see, it’s tricky. I’ll have a look in to the Arch wiki, thx.
How do you achieve the deniable encryption on you Linux machine?
I think gnome-console is the new default. At first, I was sceptical and stayed on gnome-terminal, but now gnome-console seems stable, fast and simple to replace it for me.
I have used other terminal emulators with different DEs, though.
I manually add receipts from my partner and myself to a CSV file, too. I have a custom R scripts to calculate the monthly contribution. This way we can see who paid more/less each month and needs to componsate.
In the future I want to plot graphs to see how we are affected by inflation over the past years.
Same. I’ve compiled a custom variant of Iosevka for terminal and code, because I want to have some chars in a certain way, especially the 0 and the & for even better readability. I used to have Monoid for code and terminal, but it the pixel perfect size for 12pt was getting too small for me and my eyes are not getting any better. Iosevka looks better even after some hinting by the OS.
On the rest of the desktop UI I use B612, because it is very ledgible, I recently switch over from the hyperledible Atkinson font. Before that I had Gidole on the desktop. Very pleasing, but not that readable at same font size.
You’re young. I switched jobs and profession twice already. For me, it was the other way around and back again. Came from programming (10 years) then Linux adminstration (2 years) and decided to do Geography. Studied it and the programming skills helped me there, too.
There is always something you can take with you to the next job or profession.
I wasn’t lucky to get a job where I can use my Geography studies so I am now almost 2 years in web programming. I did not have much experience in the field, but I found a place where my Linux adminstration knowledge is useful and I improved web backend programming skills (PHP) on the job.
Soft skills count, too. Reliablity, ability to work in a team. Recruiters look for those things.
And btw. I got my Linux knowledge initially only from personal unpaid studies and projects in my free time.
I used that combination, too. But I have settled for only the useless gaps extension for now. PaperWM was behind Gnome version too long and now I have seen there is Niri getting better and better. I will switch someday, I guess. It has the same concept as PaperWM, but is a scrollable/linear WM from the ground up.
~/gits
Documentation is usually a doc
folder inside the repo or just a README.md
for small projects.
I guess, I have too many (new) songs in my playlist. Would I otherwise get in a programming tunnel easier?
Yes, I know, there is music for programming, but it is all new to me, hence too exciting and I get distracted. I have to test things.
Our dev stack could totally run on Linux, but management wants standardization for security reasons. We have a mixed environment of Win10 and Win11 and our scripts to setup and update the dev environment produce sometimes unpredictable results even on the same version of Windows. <_<
We’re not even using WSL2 to speed things up because we don’t get enough time to adapt our scripts to configure docker to use WSL2.
My next move will be asking to get Fridays off, because they denied my whish to use Linux. If they deny my part-time request, I will look elsewhere in 2025.
That was me 2 years ago. Now, I am wondering how I got the work done until now on Win11. It just takes longer and compensation for overtime helps. And by compensation I don’t mean money; I get my time back, working less on other days.
I will ask for a 4 day workweek. Every day without Windows is a good day. (:
Same here, but in a small company a non-functional windows machine can be a pain although you get paid for overtime.
And, even in Europe companies exist that do unpaid overtime. Worked at one for almost 3 years, all Linux, but I had to prepare for work on weekends. It was not worth it and it did not have anything to do with missing Linux skills. It was just a very demanding job with too much travel time. I hate unpaid overtime.
So, it is easier to blame Win11 that s*** itself again when work could not be done in time.
Do you have a guide that makes this possible?
And what do you mean by using vscode remote ssh session? Does this vscode instance is started from the WSL via some kind of ssh- Y
?
This mind set has it’s limit when you need to get something done, see your family after 8h of work and don’t log overtime for some stupid windows s****.
But, yes, in most cases I just log additional unproductive time in my timesheet. It would suck, if I couldn’t compansate the overtime and leave work earlier on Fridays or so. Management has to live with the fact that working with Windows is not as efficient.
Since my question, Gentoo has changed in a favourable way. Guess what, I did not have the time to switch somewhere else. Enabling the binary repository for my existing Gentoo install was easy.
Once again I have zero complaints and I can stay on Gentoo. Updates don’t take ages anymore. (: