Have you tried the Raspberry Pi Image Generator?
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bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Linux@lemmy.ml•EU OS: A Fedora-based distro 'for the public sector'1·2 months agoSomeone who doesn’t use the distro is saying a tool ‘is a must’ when I do use the distro and have never needed it. You do you, but the point of my original comment was that it’s a valid distro for Europeans wanting a non-US option. Doesn’t mean you need to like it or use, but others might.
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Linux@lemmy.ml•EU OS: A Fedora-based distro 'for the public sector'3·2 months agoSo you find Gnome & KDE ugly? I’ve never needed to use Yast for any system configuration. Having BTFRS with snapshots as default makes it a great distro.
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Linux@lemmy.ml•EU OS: A Fedora-based distro 'for the public sector'2·2 months agoSUSE/OpenSUSE seems like a much more European option
Shorthand is hard to learn from and hard to troubleshoot in complicated scripts.
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Self Hosted - Self-hosting your services.@lemmy.ml•I'm new to self-hosting and struggling to get my services accessible externally. I'm using Traefik as a reverse proxy on a Raspberry Pi 500 running Stormux (Arch Linux ARM-based). My public IP1·4 months agoSo that means the router isn’t forwarding the ports to your devices. As others have said, it could be the ISP blocking it or it could be a configuration issue in the port fowarding.
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Self Hosted - Self-hosting your services.@lemmy.ml•I'm new to self-hosting and struggling to get my services accessible externally. I'm using Traefik as a reverse proxy on a Raspberry Pi 500 running Stormux (Arch Linux ARM-based). My public IP2·4 months agoDo you have any service listening on port 80? If not, I’d close it in the firewall and disable the forwarding in the router. Also sounds like a bad idea to set your router security to ‘low’, whatever that means for your router.
You can use a tool like this to check if your ports are accessible from the internet: https://www.yougetsignal.com/tools/open-ports/
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Self Hosted - Self-hosting your services.@lemmy.ml•Hi everyone! How are you all doing tonight? I just had a frustrating experience trying to set up a free #domain or #subdomain for my #SelfHosted services. Unfortunately, I can't use my1·4 months agoSorry, what’s preventing you from adding the subdomains in the Vultr DNS?
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For me it’s that Tumblweed at least uses BTRFS by default, so rolling back to a previous snapshot is a breeze if needed.
I tipped him well
I can’t tell if that’s supposed to be sarcasm, but if not you were encouraging his bad behaviour.
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Linux@lemmy.ml•Linux Sys Admins, do you work on Linux or Windows office laptops?2·7 months agoSounds like you need to familiarise yourself with PowerShell and Group Policy.
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Linux@lemmy.ml•VirtualBox 7.1 Released with Qt 6 GUI, Wayland Support for Clipboard Sharing - 9to5Linux5·8 months agoVbox will create a bridge with my wifi card (I’m a laptop user with no option for a wired nic in the host).
I’ve never been able to get kvm to do that and haven’t found any working instructions online that a simpleton like me can follow
You can always try the ‘Contact’ form on the site, it’s not likely anyone here is going to be able to give you good advice
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Linux@lemmy.ml•Is there a use case for Crowd Strike Falcon on Linux?92·10 months agoSo what is your suggestion for a viable alternative that auditors will also accept?
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Open Source@lemmy.ml•Firefox added ad tracking and has already turned it on without asking you493·10 months agoI’m surprised that no one has commented on the Mastodon post’s author recommending people ‘use a privacy concious browser like Chrome’. What a way to invalidate her arguments
I don’t have a better answer for OP, but telling them to switch distros is also not answering their question at all.
bravemonkey@lemmy.cato Linux@lemmy.ml•Question: If windows is required, what distro do you recommend?8·10 months agoI would highly recommend against installing a pirated version of Windows like BearOfATime suggests (at least via the second link he provided) - it could cause trouble for both you and your school.
There’s a docker image already that makes it easy to deploy and use, no compiling required.
This isn’t the Raspberry Pi Imager - it’s a tool to build custom images. From the GitHub: A tool to generate highly customised software images for Raspberry Pi devices.