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Did you ever find the missing packets?
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In my student years, I always ran with Xubuntu on a used thinkpad.
Although I’m a gnome guy these days, I still need Thunar as my default file manager. It’s nearly perfect…
I run Debian with gnome, headless and raspi and love it.
Used Ubuntu for years, also had a good time and still respect the project even though it deviated from my needs.
Sometimes I’ll boot up something new just to poke around but I’m happy sticking with Debian for the time being.
If the open source release is adequate then you can just continue using it… Or fork for your needs.
I like to require access to 22 via IP whitelist and all services on SSL behind a reverse proxy. Doesn’t leave much surface to attack.
You can always set watchtower to blindly pull for you. If it’s going to be broken anyways, might as well automate the process.
As a 4 day tech worker, 1 day community gardener, I can vouch for the therapeutic nature!
Sorry, I did mean under powered.
I’m a big raspi fan but I think the Pi 4 will be overpowered for your needs.
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Kinda comes across as someone complaining about how their company implemented agile. The only thing I can relate to is long sprints around the holidays, which I don’t see as an issue.
I’ve only worked for 20-30 person companies so maybe it’s a corpo thing? The post reads like a list of red flags that would have me looking for a new job pronto.
Seems to be more a problem of shitty management than agile vs waterfall.
This will completely depend on how and what is being distributed.
For example, I used to work on an app where assets (3D models, images, etc) were appropriately diff’d during updates but the binaries were not.
Been using the flatpak, works great!
I personally also put Pydantic on the S tier.
Also, I use (geo)pandas on a regular basis and when it comes to geometric operations Shapely is an amazing library.