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  • New blogpost:

    Uncategorized blog humanjson noai
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    neil@mastodon.neilzone.co.ukN
    @ahnlak I am willing to vouch for people who I know, who are not using AI in connection with their website / blog etc.Yes, others might take a different approach.
  • New blog post:

    Uncategorized blogging blog linkdump links linkpost
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    82mhz@mastodon.bsd.cafe8
    @stefano Thank you! My pleasure
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    philredbeard@mindly.socialP
    When tech no longer serves, I don't always upgrade. Sometimes I go the other direction.https://philredbeard.com/2026/03/26/the-occasional-downgrade/It’s a blog two-fer today!#Apple #Tech #Blog #AuthorsOfMastodon
  • What the ... ?!

    Uncategorized blog freebsd linux hackernews grafana
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    larvitz@burningboard.netL
    @thorsten Glad you like it
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    ppb1701@ppb.socialP
    @AAKL yeah I figure after everything goes to disaster there will be much finger pointing and something will change "so it doesn't happen again"
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    danie10@squeet.meD
    This is a nice private option to sync across all your devices in real-time, and you can self-host you own sync device, rely on peer-to-peer between devices, or use their cloud sync. Traffic is end-to-end encrypted. It can support multiple users keeping data separated.It syncs across Linux, Windows, Android, and macOS. An iOS version should be coming in future.See github.com/Sathvik-Rao/ClipCas…#Blog, #clipboard, #opensource, #privacy, #technology
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    linuxzx80@fe.disroot.orgL
    @rpla No me creo que nadie haya joseado esto @alvin
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    danie10@squeet.meD
    I’ve been on Manjaro Linux for a good ten plus years now and been pretty happy with it. Not only that, but I love the rolling distro type updates as there has been no need to ever reinstall the OS. The problem with that is a mass of tweaks as well as software crud you collect over the years. So I felt that it was probably time for a change, and at the same time, for a re-installation, at least as far as the apps and the main configs go. I have long had a separate partition for my /home directory with all my user data and app config settings.One other reason that prompted the change, and yes it was partly the Manjaro company changes that sparked this thinking, but Manjaro does hold back new packages for testing for 2 to 3 weeks. If you do not use the AUR (really does anyone not use it on an Arch based distro?), then this is great for stability. Many AUR packages are also not going to be an issue if they are stable releases, but if you have ventured into git releases for example for OBS Studio, then the Manjaro “way” can break these packages. Once I knew this I drastically pruned back on any git releases where I could. And therefore Manjaro has still worked well for me.I’m very happy with the Arch based distros so that was where I looked at my potential successor for Manjaro. Basically I came down to EndeavourOS in the end. EndeavourOS does use the live Arch repos so it is fully in step with the latest updates there. If you use any AUR packages, this actually means BETTER stability because all dependencies are also up-to-date, and are the one’s used when testing Arch updates.Apart from that EndeavourOS’s installer as well as Nvidia driver installation is a bit friendlier than raw Arch itself. The clincher for me was that I could in fact install and use the pamac GUI installer on EndeavourOS. That made me totally at home because I loved using that on Manjaro when searching for and selecting new applications. I generally do all my daily updates via the terminal anyway (using a push button on my Stream Deck to run them).I spent a day noting what key apps were installed and how (native vs AppImage vs flatpak) as well as any menu settings, backing up a license fort DaVinci Resolve Studio, and prepping exactly what I needed to do. Furthermore, I also installed EndeavourOS into a VM for a day to test out the installation process, and to see if my key apps worked with their Manjaro user data. They all worked fine.I do anyway have full daily backups to a separate drive of all my /home user data and have TimeShift running so that my boot drive data would also be accessible if I needed to restore something (I did need my Virtual Manager VM configs that I discovered were not part of the home partition data).So yesterday I did the fresh install, and linked it to the old home partition as part of that (an error I got right at the end of the installation, related to it not being able to unmount that home partition – I realised after a second go at it, that I should just ignore that “error”). Before I restarted I also updated the fstab file to include my other drives so that they were visible after boot up. After the reboot I did replace the Nvidia open drivers with the proprietary one’s (require them for Davinci Resolve Studio).Install process on the go – I opted to do manual partitioningI then selectively reinstalled all the apps that I use regularly, and zero issues, actually. The only one not recognising its old user data was AnyType, but it anyway syncs to the cloud, so all was good. I had prepared for this anyway by saving most of the key commands etc in a text file on my backup drive.I could have opted to just automatically re-install all apps, but I really don’t want all the crud back again. All apps are working well, and updates are running.One issue I did have, and it is not EndeavourOS’s problem, was I had mounted my other drives under /run/media, so these mounts were disappearing. I should have actually mounted them under /mnt (but Manjaro had been handling it fine with whatever workaround I had forced on it from years ago). I did have to just fix that, but I should have done that a long time ago.Ignore this “error” at end of install if it is your home partitionSomething else that bugged me, but again not EndeavourOS’s own issue except that they tighten security down a bit more than Manjaro does, was my sudo access kept failing with my password being rejected. My workaround was to just use su - temporarily to become root. In the end I realised that it seems the sudoers file gives higher priority for lines lower down, and the main file does an include, to include any sub-files. I should not have tried to change my sudoer rights inside the main file, but rather in one of the sub-files. Sounds like a small thing but I needed that sudoer access as my user, to run yay install commands properly in the beginning, and it took me about 2 hours to figure all that out. After that, I got my pamac GUI going, and I was all happy!As it is still a KDE Plasma desktop it really feels and works the same. All my old desktop settings just worked. Steam Games does feel a bit slicker now and that may be the cleaner machine, newer drivers, or possibly also the performance mode I switched the CPU to now.It is a great feeling to have the latest of everything now as far as KDE packages and other drivers go.EndeavourOS’s welcome window is also quite nice. It guides you on the first start-up what to do, with pages opening for additional information. They have not yet developed as many of their own packages as Manjaro did, but I’m getting by quite fine and not really missing anything from Manjaro. EndeavourOS is fully in step with Arch, so if I ever want/need to migrate to raw Arch, it should be an easy sideways move without any app reinstallations etc.EndeavourOS welcome windowEndeavourOS could have included the pamac GUI for package easier noob installation, but it seems they prefer to be known as a terminal-centric distro. I think they could have otherwise just included a link on the welcome window to say install GUI package manager (as an option). It is a leanish distro so without packing lots of default apps like Manjaro does, this distro downloads quite quickly and installs quickly. I think it’s initial installation on the boot drive just under 20 GB.Can manage settings around log files including saving to the web#Blog, #endeavouros, #linux, #opensource, #technology
  • hey writers.

    Uncategorized blog writers writing grammar
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    mms@mastodon.bsd.cafeM
    @zordsdavini Thanks!
  • Hola people of the Fediverse

    Uncategorized blog homelab selfhosted linux blogging
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    chewie@mammut.gogreenit.netC
    @peritia https://www.wheresyoured.at/https://www.web3isgoinggreat.com/
  • New blogpost:

    Uncategorized onlinesafetyact blog
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    neil@mastodon.neilzone.co.ukN
    @dan Thanks - yes, rebuilding to fix that.
  • New blog post:

    Uncategorized blogging blog audio streaming mp3
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    82mhz@mastodon.bsd.cafe8
    New blog post: Can I hear a difference between MP3s and uncompressed audio?http://82mhz.net/posts/2026/03/can-i-hear-a-difference-between-mp3s-and-uncompressed-audio/ #blogging #blog #audio #streaming #mp3
  • New #blog post alert!

    Uncategorized blog openbsd freebsd netbsd dragonflybsd
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    bcallah@bsd.networkB
    New #blog post alert!I muse about research some of my grad students and I did around independently evaluating some #OpenBSD anti-ROP mitigations, and I bid farewell to being an OpenBSD developer.https://briancallahan.net/blog/20260322.html#freebsd #netbsd #dragonflybsd #bsd #unix #linux #compiler #compilers #rop #research
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    rubenwa@social.vivaldi.netR
    Due to surgery I'm not allowed to do any weight training yet, but I can do some #cardio #Blog #bodybuilding #fitness #MentalHealth
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    scribblanitea@cupoftea.socialS
    I wrote a blog post about how to counter the AI em dash accusations. Caution: Contains swears, mainly because AI/LLM scrapers deserve swears.https://skryblans.com/the-em-dash-conununundrum/#skryblans #blog
  • New blog post:

    Uncategorized blogging blog
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    82mhz@mastodon.bsd.cafe8
    @stefano I think that's a good approach that you've chosen, having a separate profile only for the posts, so peope can choose to follow or not, but you're not cluttering up the timeline with 14 individual posts per blog post.I always get the link to your posts via RSS and then come to your site to read. Then I come back here to shitpost about it
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    mhamzahkhan@mstdn.intahnet.co.ukM
    https://www.hamzahkhan.com/somewhere-between-excited-and-terrified/ #blog #devops
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    shi@troet.cafeS
    Und das nächste Pflänzchen ist in meinem digitalen Garten eingepflanzt! Yay! Ein Beitrag über meine Nextcloud und wie jeder an eine Nextcloud kommen kann.Achtung! Es ist etwas Kommerz dabei, da ich ja auch irgendwie nach der Umschulung mein Leben finanzieren muss. Ist aber sehr minimal.https://shidigital.com/garten/plant5.html#blog #Nextcloud #digitalgarden #openSource
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    dilmandila@mograph.socialD
    Anyone have recommendations on a simple share button for my #wordpress blogs? I removed all the plugins for they were cluttered and a nuisance, and I keep seeing simple buttons like this but have no idea what plugin to use. It has to be free with no pro version, or if for sale, then a one-off payment rather than subscription. #blog #webdev
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    ppb1701@ppb.socialP
    Jensen announced everything Monday. We're just now finding out how deep it goes.New post: "You Load Sixteen Tokens, What Do You Get?"The mine got safer. The model stayed the same.https://blog.ppb1701.com/you-load-sixteen-tokens-what-do-you-get#ai #bigtech #blog #compensation #tokens #nvidia #userhostile