Calling them "Top Apps" does not indicate new apps.
I find a lot of such lists useless in any case, since it really depends on your needs.
Calling them "Top Apps" does not indicate new apps.
I find a lot of such lists useless in any case, since it really depends on your needs.
My top 5 linux apps are probably something like:
The list in the video should have been, "Here's 5 maybe interesting apps for Linux".
Have you considered the cheaper LFCS (Linux Foundation Certified Sysadmin) instead? It might be easier for the company to "swallow" and it's more general Linux instead of mainly Red Hat based. I took it this year and it's pretty standard System Administrator stuff.
I would probably suggest something based on LXQT or even XFCE for a device with only an N100 at it's core. That CPU is the bottleneck of the device.
I'm in the same boat as you. My server runs 24/7, because I have some services that require close to 100% uptime to function correctly.
My UPS works fine though, and I wouldn't go without it these days. Just because the damage an improper shutdown can cause on data.
Interestingly, the Bluetooth did work under PureOS but I never figured out why.
The bluetooth probably needs a non-free firmware blob, as most of them do.
Then you don't welcome contributions. So this is dead in the water for me.
Well, whoever is developing it should publish the code somewhere...
Any links to the actual sources and not just random proton links?
Github comes up with a file-based build system for tup.
The poster did not, no. Plasma had a habit, back in the day, of doing that, but not for a while now.
kinfocenter is an application in Plasma where you can see all kinds of information about your system. So no, they are not just adding k to random words like quantum in Ant-man. :)
I use the feedreader from within Thunderbird for RSS. But I just use it to track software releases. Not articles and such.