

The dependency chain for building the entire kernel depends on what you included in the feature set. The reason it probably worked on Ubuntu is because the build-essential package covers the most common deps needed to build the kernel.


The dependency chain for building the entire kernel depends on what you included in the feature set. The reason it probably worked on Ubuntu is because the build-essential package covers the most common deps needed to build the kernel.


Need output to be able to tell you anything. Post the errors.


Regardless, if you’re building something without a purpose, assign it a dedicated purpose instead of just making it some other running machine.


You literally say in your post you’re building another machine.
Make it a single purpose machine that does the thing you need it for.


Separate the use-case here:
For your desktop, whatever works. There is no one distro that gives you some leg-up on performance or anything else. You can install the same software on all, and the kernel is largely the same.
Just get or build a NAS for hosting media. A Synology or Qnap has a bit of added cost, but the maintenance overhead is reduced by a LOT versus running TrueNAS, OMV, or similar. That being said, choose the right tool for the job, and don’t just run Debian for this purpose because it just adding admin overhead you don’t need. This probably has been solved from your specific angle. What you want is simplicity in maintenance. Being able to hotswap and repair a failed drive means a huge win.


I thought they found this over a decade ago?


Blacklists using IPv4 as reference usually expire old addresses after a period of time for this reason. You can also find your IP in any lists and request to be removed if you can contact the maintainer. If you’re using a shared IP for ingress or egress, you’re kind of SOL though. You need to get a dedicated static IP from whomever your host is to help prevent this from happening.


This is for the client display only, and not the iOS API interface as I’m discussing. It’s not very plainly laid out in the docs, but one would assume any queuing of content into the notification system would be stored or cached if not cleared. There doesn’t seem to be a way to have a client of that system to clear it’s own data once it’s in there, just cancel last notification.


Clever. Not much you can do for this except not subscribe your app to the notifications API, or take extra steps to attempt to clear them, but I don’t remember that being an option on iOS. Going to be an interesting fix.


Lots of people have moved on to more dynamic options that use JIT-style routing and role-,based security.
Netbird, Tailscale/Headscale, ZeroTier and Netmaker are all pretty popular.
Netbird and Netmaker are probably the simplest to get started with, but Headscale server + Tailscale client has been the best performing in my experience.


You asking for a service, or a server to run for yourself?
Linux has been the most prolific OS on devices for 25 years, friend.


Go back 20 years. See how many times this prediction has been made 🤣🤣
The only shift now is Microsoft shitting the bed so hard that people don’t want to deal with them. The difference this time is the MacBook Neo.
People would gladly pay Apple $600 for a working machine WITH support and stores everywhere to get help if they have hardware issues. It’s the new iPhone business model. They’ll be taking more desktop market share than people even imagine on the price point alone.


If you’re getting file verification errors, it probably means there are issues with files on one end of the other.
So a few things:


Versions should be fine. Your options matter though, so send the full command you’re using.
Also try this:


Jaguar with 4GB of RAM. It’ll do all the normal desktop stuff and games up through maybe PS2 no problem.
Make sure you add at least 4GB of swap though.


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It won’t work.
Like every these, repetition is key, and also stepping through each idea to get to an outcome.
Good luck to you though.


Systemd is fine. Stop getting trolled by antiquated neckbeards.
Unless you find a specific problem with something, don’t go looking for reasons to fix that which is not broken.
Not really unless you need a specific optimization or module that isn’t available otherwise. Most distros make distribution of external modules available via package manager, and most of the optimizations you would want to enabke can be turns on or off elsewhere as feature flags.