
Oh, I see – I guess I’m not sure what you mean by stable here.
switch puts you in the new generation immediately (which can occasionally cause some weirdness) while boot just makes it the default generation on the next reboot.

Oh, I see – I guess I’m not sure what you mean by stable here.
switch puts you in the new generation immediately (which can occasionally cause some weirdness) while boot just makes it the default generation on the next reboot.

What’s it called in NixOS? I usually just reboot after every update because I don’t trust that everything has properly re-linked and refeshed
People swear there’s secret sauce in the Cachy kernel too.

Minecraft server on a laptop. Life has never been the same since.

It sounds like it brings you joy

Host PieFed instead. I’ve hosted Lemmy and PieFed and Lemmy was a huge pain to set up, and was very resource-heavy. PieFed was a breeze to set up, and the dev team beats Lemmy’s Dev team by a country-mile.
Ollama + Open web-ui could handle this.
I think MC servers are the #1 gateway drug to self-hosting.

I do exactly this with Armbian and an Orange Pi Zero 3 for a little Home Assistant display.
Autostart a browser in kiosk-mode on boot. Nice and simple.
I also made an image of that SD card if I ever need to set up another.
I don’t have any idea of how to manage a public facing service but I will figure it out.
Terrible move.
What if someone puts something illegal on your server? How do you know someone hasn’t done that already?

You will be surprised at how much you can do with very little and very old hardware.
Why not any of the other Matrix clients? I’ve got some friends on Element with some bridges and it’s pretty much perfect.
Right, but the point is that for most end users, their workflow isn’t broken.