Did a search for ubuntu “integrity: problem loading x.509 certificate” and the first result indicates out of date bios certificates needed for secure boot on older laptops. Disabling secure boot seems to be the suggested fix.
hi
Did a search for ubuntu “integrity: problem loading x.509 certificate” and the first result indicates out of date bios certificates needed for secure boot on older laptops. Disabling secure boot seems to be the suggested fix.
I’ve been trying harder to diversify my youtube content. Please share links to visible minority (from a western pov) creators who post similar content. Why are there so few?
Do you mind including your budget in the OP? That would help others do their own calculations on electricity savings vs cost of hardware over time.
I’ve been monitoring this page https://gist.github.com/ironicbadger/5da9b321acbe6b6b53070437023b844d from https://yewtu.be/watch?v=ceUIUyZwchY
It’s showing some really interesting results for various processors and their efficiency while transcoding.
Is 60W a lot? I think a system with a few mechanical hard drives and fans will be at least half of that regardless of the processor used. Please correct me if I’m wrong.
I’m glad OP’s linux gaming experience is so much better than it is on windows. I don’t say this to cast aspersions but if the results were reliable and repeatable, people like christitus, gardiner and many others would make daily videos on the topic just to get all the views(dollars) it would surely generate. It would cause a seismic shift in the PC gaming space.
“Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence” - Sagan
Obligatory I play exclusively on linux.
In the absence of a gamersnexus video or phoronix article, I’m going to take this with a large grain of salt. Especially when a video like this one is showing much higher performance in windows. The different cpu shouldn’t account for much of a difference when playing at higher resolutions and the benchmarks shows the game being gpu limited.
Kobo with calibre-web sync has been great. Calibre-web github.
The lidarr way.
All the arrs, HA, pihole and a few smaller containers running on pi4. It was my gateway into the world of self hosting.
It might be easier to get suggestions if you go into more detail about the functionality you’re looking for, whether it replicates paid features of other clients or something else altogether.
I use the todoagenda widget to see my schedule and minical widget for a quick overview.
I have it running in a docker container and the subnet setting seems to work. Also should mention it’s restricted to eth0.
You can set the subnet to be scanned in the arpnet settings. Restricting the scans to your devices subnet will get rid of all the extra docker IPs.
Probably owl.
Flathub still shows the old version and the github page has been archived. The main site doesn’t even have an option to choose your download package.
I’ve already installed 115 but this doesn’t seem new user friendly.
Here are a couple of links to help you get a better idea of what purelymail is like:
I’m in the process of trying it out for a year before I switch over fully. Have yet to run into any issues but I’m not a heavy email user.
Thank you for tempo, it has quickly become my default subsonic client.
It looks like that instance isn’t using the most up-to-date version since the “press go” issue has been fixed. Try to keep in mind that the initial commit was on June 24 and it’s still very early in the development stage. If you look at the commits, you can see the developer has been very active.
Wouldn’t getting something like a Kobo and syncing with Calibre be a much easier/cheaper option?