

They have Open Source versions of their stack. Just run it yourself at no cost.
Am I missing something?
Also, use any other similar service which all have open source counterparts: Head scale/Tailscale, or ZeroTier.


They have Open Source versions of their stack. Just run it yourself at no cost.
Am I missing something?
Also, use any other similar service which all have open source counterparts: Head scale/Tailscale, or ZeroTier.


Any RSS reader will work with RSS feeds. It’s an open standard.


To be fair, you could play these games all day, and it still won’t register exactly what you’re doing because it lacks that repetition.
Try installing it across more machines and get some reps in that way:
Having one machine working well just won’t get you the exposure you need. Identify some goal of anything you want working, and set about doing it the hard way.


Same way you started anywhere: practice.
Most people who use Windows cant, and don’t, need to fix a thing. Same thing in Linux.
The goal is to make the OS as compatible with as many machines as possible, to make sure that user intervention isn’t really needed, so you don’t really get that reflexive sort of knowledge unless you’re doing it for work and being exposed to it at a MUCH larger scale. Even then, you forget the things you don’t use frequently.
There tons of learning simulators out there for the basics. Just found this one. Give it a go: https://itsfoss.gitlab.io/post/test-your-bash-skills-by-playing-command-line-games/


For starters: Rails, PHP, and passthrough routing stacks like message handlers and anything that expects socket handling. It’s just not built for that, OR session management for such things if whatever it’s talking to isn’t doing so.
It seems like you think I’m talking smack about HAProxy, but you don’t understand it’s real origin or strengths and assume it can do anything.
It can’t. Neither can any of the other services I mentioned.
Chill out, kid.


HAProxy is not meant for complex routing or handling of endpoints. It’s a simple service for Load Balancing or proxying alone. All the others have better features otherwise.


I’ll be honest with you here, Nginx kind of ate httpd’s lunch 15 years ago, and with good reason.
It’s not that httpd is “bad”, or not useful, or anything like that. It’s that it’s not as efficient and fast.
The Apache DID try to address this awhile back, but it was too late. All the better features of nginx just kinda did httpd in IMO.
Apache is fine, it’s easy to learn, there’s a ton of docs around for it, but a massively diminished userbase, meaning less up to date information for new users to find in forums in the like.


It’s called a Reverse Proxy. The most popular options are going to be Nginx, Caddy, Traefik, Apache (kinda dated, but easy to manage), or HAProxy if you’re just doing containers.


Drivers and such are fine. Performance and such…meh.
They still don’t come close to AMD, and the price isn’t quite distinct enough for people to be drawn from there. Intel is also in the midst of this shakeup with Nvidia injecting cash into the business, and have said they plan to release Intel+Nvidia APU chips to compete with AMD, but that’s not anytime soon.
If they found a good deal on a card, the benchmarks are decisive enough (check Phoronix) at the price point, and they don’t plan on keeping it for 5 years, then sure.
If they find an AMD that is close in price but a great deal more performance, go AMD.


What kind of machine is this? If it’s something like an HP/Dell/Lenovo, it may have a boot blocker enabled somehow. It wouldn’t make a whole lot of sense since you managed to install Ubuntu, but they may possibly be creating different types of boot volumes.
You’d normally see a message like “HP Sure Start” at the boot screen, for example.
It’s pretty hard to totally “crash” a running Linux kernel, so understanding some details about what symptoms happened, during, and after (screen freezes, sound stops, mouse stops…etc) would be helpful to discern if this was a kernel thing, or just apps crashing. Almost always ends up being a hardware issue or resource constraint though.
As for game logs and crashing, here are some guides and info:
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=3287870137 (This shows some debug steps in detail) https://github.com/ValveSoftware/Proton/issues/6650 https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=285102


First: there is no cheap way to back this amount of data up. AWS Glacier would be about $200/mo, PLUS bandwidth transfer charges, which would be something like $500. R2 would be about $750/mo, no transfer charges. So assume that most companies with some sort of whacky, competing product would be billed by either of these companies with you as a consumer, and you can figure out how this is the baseline of what you’ll be getting charged from them.
50TB of what? If it’s just readily available stuff you can download again, skip backing that up. Only keep personal effects, and see how much you can reduce this number by.


I want to say Sonarr has a regex renaming feature, but I may just be making that up as I’m not looking at my instance right now. Doing whatever renaming based on a pattern would be preferable during the download phase in order to keep the metadata of each service clean.
Failing that, if you have a predictable list of release group strings you want removed from filenames, a one liner with sed or similar would take care of this. You’d then break the known locations of these files by any service tracking them of course, but they will eventually be reindexed.


Seems kind of pricey for that specific unit, but it should work well for just hosting simple services.


That’s probably some libinput confusion.
Try adding Sunshine as a non-steam game under Steam, launch, then see if it maps properly like that.


What kernel are you on? 3.15+ has full support for these controllers, so it should work flawlessly.


Get a replacement. I know folks who have just gotten bad units. In general,no feel like their QA is a bit lacking, but if you get a good one, should work pretty flawlessly.


What might simplify your thinking about this is called “Semantic Versioning”.
You have a big codebase of all kinds of features, but at a certain time you want to release it to be able to differentiate between a point in time and release number so you can tell when a regression happens and address it.
Proton is released by version to be able to see this exact thing. They keep all the old versions available for users because they know that not every single point release will work for all games, and there will be regressions.
This allows users to be able to identify a stable working version of Proton for a specific game, and stick to it. If you try to upgrade for a newer release for some reason and find a problem, you can always go back to the previous working version and know for certain it will work without issues.
For your specific scenario, just check ProtonDB for games and see if people have posted tweaks and config combos for a specific game. Great resource for this exact reason.


It’s a dumbass AI-powered recommendation engine with an awful GUI. That’s about it.
As far as it being malicious, that’s really up to you.
Duder…asked and answered.
You’ve asked the same question on a bunch of different servers and threads. You’ve been told what the issue is.
By creating new posts everywhere I don’t think you’re going to get a better answer than what you’ve been given.
If you just want things to work, just switch to something else. Nothing stopping you.