Not sure if I understand you correctly.
Your goal is to have a single (1) computer that replaces all computers you currently have by essentially virtualizing different systems?
Not sure if I understand you correctly.
Your goal is to have a single (1) computer that replaces all computers you currently have by essentially virtualizing different systems?
You get downvoted because people here tend to dislike Apple (which is fine), but that’s actually what happened.
The iPad (and eventually Android tablets) basically ate up the market share of Netbooks very quickly. Steve Jobs introduced the iPad as a Netbook alternative as a device class between a smartphone and a (full-sized) notebook/desktop.
https://www.cnet.com/science/apples-ipad-nabs-netbook-market-share/
The best Windows is Wine ;)
Why don’t they bundle the browser itself in the Flatpak and update it via the default Flatpak update mechanism?
Fabric with some performance-enhancing mods is a great choice as well, yes! I’ve been wanting to test it on my server for a while now, just haven’t got around to it yet.
Paper changes some of the more quirky vanilla redstone behavior, although - again - it’s very configurable so some of that original behavior can be restored.
I’d mostly base it on which plugin/mod ecosystem you prefer/require.
World simulation (ticks) is single-threaded, but things like world generation are multithreaded. I’d recommend Paper as server software as it’s more performant out of the box (vs. vanilla) and configurable (ex. how many threads world generation is allowed to use).
If you host multiple worlds I recommend spinning up a Paper instance for each world separately and connect them with Velocity.
Ryzen 7000 should have better single-threaded performance than your i5-9500 but as it’s a VM ymmv depending on whether Sparked Host overprovisions their machines.
Couple of years, yeah.
They run their own registry at lscr.io
. You can essentially prefix all your existing linuxserver image names with lscr.io/
to pull them from there instead.
Yeah it’s definitely more “logical” and easier to use the way uMatrix does it.
Its functionality is pretty much built into uBlock Origin now, see https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock/wiki/Dynamic-filtering.
Until it starts breaking, like it did for me upgrading from Fedora 39 to 40 for example.
Or until you try to bind mount a volume of a container and need to use z
or Z
flags.
The “advantage” compared to a simple Linux USB is that it saves the exact state of the VM I guess.
Meh, I’d rather open the applications I need again (or let my DE restore them) than running a VM just for that reason.
If it uses known VPN servers as exit nodes (which seems to be what it does), then no.
Does this happen with the network cable unplugged?
YouTube is by far the slowest website I visit, it’s so bloated.
I use as few Electron apps as possible. I replaced VSCode with (depending on what I’m trying to achieve) Helix, Sublime Text or a JetBrains IDE.
It actually performed decent until Apple gimped the SSD part to a mere 32 GB (down from 128 GB) in newer iMac models.
I am SCP-426, your toaster.
Accessing region-specific content doesn’t work as well as it once did with some services actively blocking access from public VPN services nowadays.
Windscribe has a plan where you can pay for an IP address dedicated to you, but this takes away the advantages a shared IP may have.
Same. It’s pretty cheap, comes with unlimited free traffic and is just simple to use. Supports many ways to access it, including BorgBackup.