Has Home Assistant integration as well.
Has Home Assistant integration as well.
Or init.rd I guess? Like it or not, the whole point of systemd is to replace some legacy systems.
Have a look at systemd socket, they do exactly what you want, monitor the Unix socket and launch the service if it isn’t running when something is received on the socket! Very nifty!
I honestly think they gave developers what they wanted with that, the CSD facilities are easy to use, well integrated and pretty uniform… But on the other hand some software demands (or it at least strongly prefers) complete customization (think WinAmp), and that is now possible.
I really like working with GNOME. Really wished I could find a job working with it again.
I think you can do push-to-talk/drop-in at least via tts using BroswerMods on home assistant, that would be one option.
Navidrome and Gonic are very active projects yes. Why would it not be a thing anymore? Works fantastic.
Hard pass
Which file browser are you using?
While the organizational structure exists, it isn’t represented in a legal manner like a 501c3.
Software For The Public Interests is, but they only handle trademarks and like you said some rare funding.
Why roll Debian in that? It doesn’t have a formal structure. I know it’s kind of moot, but still.
Yes my answer is for use with Let’s Encrypt.
Fair, I don’t know why I read OPs post as asking for let’s encrypt certs. Internal CA is indeed an option.
They do not. See my other reply about DNS verification.
OP is asking for cases where you don’t want to allow the service (or reverse proxy) to be accessible via the web.
You can use the DNS verification method. Either using nsupdate with bind or what ever protocol your DNS provider and favorite ACME (certbot, acme, lego, etc) utility supports. As long as your DNS server is publically reachable that will work, even if the subdomain itself doesn’t exist publically.
But QubesOS wins because Xen is better at it because it’s faster because it’s type 1 but vbox or qemu/kvm is type 2 hypervisor.
This is incorrect, Qemu/KVM is also a type 1 hypervisor. KVM has a slight edge on performance due to better cpu pinning.
You don’t need evolution for gnome-contacts and I’m not sure how much more lightweight a contact app can get. It literally does nothing but list and edit contacts, and works with dav via gnome-accounts.
Found this not so long ago and it literally made me sad I don’t manage an LDAP anymore!
What’s wrong with gnome-contacts
?
Good read, in line with what Cory Doctorow had to say almost 15 years ago in The Coming War on General Computation, as well as his more recent If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing.