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netchami, in [Question] Which shell prompt do you use and why?

I’ve been using zsh for some time, but I finally switched to fish. I also checked out Nushell, it lacks some features, but it’s really interesting. On zsh I was using Powerlevel10k, on Fish I used oh-my-fish with the shellder theme before I switched to Starship. I’m very happy with this setup. My prompt looks like this: https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/9e0ef0c1-d121-44c1-be99-4d03b19af6bb.webp

My Terminal Emulator of choice is kitty, the font is Monocraft.

redcalcium, in I bought a Surface Pro 4 - Update

Two hours to power on? Did I read this right? What happen during this long power up sequence? Is it stuck on POST, bootloader or kernel load?

glizzyguzzler, in I bought a Surface Pro 4 - Update
@glizzyguzzler@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Ditch it, the Surface Pro 4’s are cursed via shit manufacturing.

Its screen will fail sooner or later flickergate.com . I had one, it started flickering after the “extended” warranty. The display is useless now. Nothing fixes it. At first the flicker stopped if something on the screen moved, so I used this github.com/…/Surface-Pro-Screen-Flicker-Solver to mitigate it. But within a day or two it was worse. I tried a reduced refresh rate, but that did not help by then. It quickly got worse when in use, within minutes after a week of the flickering starting. A used one is just pre-accelerated to its demise.

Replacing the screen - even opening the device - is egregiously dangerous because the screen often cracks when taking it apart. Microsoft abs sucks for making a device that can’t last when it clearly should. (Not to say anything about your specific problems! It sounds like the battery needs to be replaced, but it can run without a battery as far as I know so not sure why it can’t power up with it heavily depleted)

Edit: if you’re going to remove the sceeen, replace the battery and replace the screen with a surface pro 5 screen. They sell them. The batteries get fucked quick cause the heat sink cooks them, so it’s prob the battery causing your problems (mine had shit battery life at its end too)

Here is a blurb from Reddit describing what to get (ifixit apparently sells a surface pro 5 screen as well if you want one degree better than direct China): My advice, if you have a Surface Pro 4 with an Samsung Panel is to replace for an LG Screen from Surface Pro 5/6. You need to buy this LCD cable too for that conversion: M1010537-003

You can check in the device manager which LCD panel you have on your Surface

Kushia, in Happy 19th Birthday, Ubuntu!
@Kushia@lemmy.ml avatar

I miss the days of Ubuntu being a new upstart and Mark Shuttleworth going into space and being cool. I was involved with the project a bunch back then and even talked to him briefly once online.

There’s been a lot of poor decisions honestly since then unfortunately and I haven’t used Ubuntu in a while.

virtualbriefcase, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Debian or Alpine would be perfect. Debian has bigger repos, better hardware compatibility, and maybe a bit more stability. Alpine is scary lightweight and a small ISO download.

neurospice, in Lightweight distro for home server?

I use Debian for one and Arch for another. Debian is probably a better option, but I’ve had no issues with my arch server. Just use what you’re most comfortable with

eoli3n, in Lightweight distro for home server?
@eoli3n@lemmy.ml avatar

what you ask is Debian what you need is FreeBSD

ultra, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Debian is perfect for this.

MangoKangaroo, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Since nobody has said it yet: Ubuntu server or Debian. /s

In seriousness, I use both. They’re pretty great. Note that if you use Ubuntu server you can get Ubuntu Pro free for up to three devices. This comes with ten years (!) of security patches. Great if you aren’t keen on upgrading anytime soon.

kraniax, in Any advice on running a pubnix/tilde?

XMPP is a must. I automatically discard tildes that host matrix but not XMPP.

Evil_Shrubbery, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Debian or Ubuntu Server (or something specific to servers purpose, like OMV, etc).

… but ProxMox (a hypervisor, Debian based) doesn’t have much overhead & runs on old PCs pretty well. And with that, you can pretty much try any distro (as a full virtual machines, perhaps with dockers within it, or as a lightweight containers that are really resource efficient). Or separate containers for each purpose (for beginners, there are like TurnKey solutions to stuff like NAS, it takes literally a few minutes to set up).

Backups (snapshots) are easy too, and a later migration to a better/next server is basically two clicks away.

bear, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Adding my voice to the Debian choir.

30p87, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Probably Debian. It’s basically the most used distro, and therefore has many online resources.

  • Old software, but very stable.
  • No bloat, very clean.
  • No custom programs interfering with any configurations etc.
  • Support for many server software etc.

If you want an even cleaner OS, where (nearly) everything is under your control and as lightweight as possible, Arch would be for you. There’s the bonus of the AUR, but the huge problem of newest, “unstable” software, though I’ve yet to experience any problem on testing repos, except for the Nvidia drivers. In general, Debian should be enough of lightweightiness and control.

ptman, in Lightweight distro for home server?

Linux is quite lightweight. Pick a distro that doesn’t run a lot of stuff by default. OpenBSD only runs sshd exposed to the network, AFAIR. Debian probably does the same. But really, the lightness comes from what isn’t running. NixOS, fedora, rocky, alpine are all decent alternatives.

bastion, in Lightweight distro for home server?

A lot of people are saying Debian, because Debian.

Debian. I’ve literally run Debian stable with uptimes of over a year.

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