
Edit: you didn’t answer my question, by the way

Edit: you didn’t answer my question, by the way

Why are you so adamant that reading an analog clock is required to pass an exam that doesn’t feature any material related to reading analog clocks?


Do you want a home server --> yes --> debian


Congratulations, you figured out why people don’t like it

Now this is a shit post
Everyone else has pretty good information. To answer the edit, the only Linux specific piece of hardware you’d want is an AMD gpu. To be clear, Nvidia isn’t bad and would work just fine if you want one, but it’s drivers can potentially be annoying to install and get running (I’ve heard it’s better nowadays, but I don’t have one so idk), whereas AMD drivers are part of the kernel (i.e. you don’t have to do anything, they’re just there, and will work)


For the purposes of this explanation sonarr and radarr are the same, but keep in mind that sonarr only does tv shows and radarr only does movies
You tell sonarr what you want to watch --> sonarr tells prowlarr what you want to watch --> prowlarr will search websites for magnet links to your show (you have to specify which websites) --> prowlarr will give the download manager (qbittorrent, etc) the magnet link and it will download it --> sonarr will take the downloaded file and copy it somewhere else for organizational purposes --> media server (jellyfin) will see the copied file and download associated metadata (thumbnail, episode name, episode number, etc) and allow you to watch it
The only programs you need for a purely functional arr stack are sonarr/radarr, prowlarr, qbittorrent, and jellyfin, or any other media server. Anything else is purely icing on the cake
If it’s in your budget I recommend getting a pixel 9. I don’t know what prices look like right now, but I got a refurbished 9 pro ealier this year for about $750. The only box it doesn’t check is having a headphone jack


Public Mobile is a cell provider which would make this app similar to your T-Mobile or Verizon app. Which makes it all the more embarrassing that you get shoved into a queue

3rd largest country by population, 4th largest country by landmass
Actually it’s not that big lul
Lul
I’ve been a Pop stan since I started using Linux so I’ll always recommend it, and it helps that you already like it. But if you specifically want something different (and that isn’t arch), I’d say Fedora KDE


Like I said, I didn’t buy it expecting it to last forever, but I haven’t run into any problems yet and I’ve only had the drive for about a year now. We’ll see how it holds up when it hits real long term numbers.


It depends on how important your data is to you. Me personally, I just run a jellyfin server with dubiously acquired tv shows and movies. Which is to say that if I lost everything in a catastrophic failure, I wouldn’t much care, so I decided to get a refurbished 14tb USB connected external HDD.
If you run anything more important, you should listen to others who might have a more robust solution

Yeah but what if that one @everyone is important
Genuinely can’t tell if this is a joke or not lmao