

As an alternative, if you wanted something less secure, and more ethical, consider buying a Fairphone. However GrapheneOS does not support Fairphone at this moment.


As an alternative, if you wanted something less secure, and more ethical, consider buying a Fairphone. However GrapheneOS does not support Fairphone at this moment.


That’s fair you ask how to improve the signal. You could try to either bring down the music quality, or to download the songs.
Other than that, do what you can to avoid anything that will slow down your bandwidth.


I use the family version of Qobuz. Comes to CAD $3.20/M per user, or CAD $38.40/Y per user.
They pay the artist super well, sound quality is good.
Some songs are missing, but can found in their store purchasing in other countries (for example, I not find some albums in their Canadian store, but I could find them in their U.S. store).
There is also AD free YouTube for missing songs. Or but them from Bandcamp during Bandcamp Fridays (for max artist revenue)


Veganism would solve a lot of our world problems. It isn’t difficult, humans are just very stupid in this aspect.
Do you have any quality of life recommendations for Synapse? Like DevOps / Self Maintenance stuff – e.g., auto-update, control centers, deployment scripts, plugins/modules if they exist, anything else? :-D
This is pretty good. One point I wasn’t sure if I should go with https://forgejo.ellis.link/continuwuation/continuwuity or install Synapse from Github. But if you mention Element / Synapse, then that sounds good. Thanks!


In Canada, you can go to your provinces service website to order a new one. They will mail it to you.


I did not find a way to do this. However part of my problem was Caddy reverse proxy not pointing to the right container. Updating my Caddyfile, and running the following solved accessing via my domain or other IPs.


I did not find a way to do this. However part of my problem was Caddy reverse proxy not pointing to the right container. Updating my Caddyfile, and running the following solved accessing via my domain or other IPs.

This might sound silly, but I legit pressured cooked butternut squash for 7 minutes with a cup of water.
Then I added salt, pepper, a bit of oil.
Super delicious and quick to make. And can even eat the soft skin.



Oh wow, strange!


If anyone is looking for a Canadian or international order, I just found this U.K. site which multiple threads of Reddit have been talking about. They offer shipping tracking.
https://www.clove.co.uk/products/fairphone-gen-6
https://www.reddit.com/r/fairphone/comments/kkd44p/is_there_a_way_to_get_a_fairphone_in_canada/


If anyone is looking for a Canadian or international order, I just found this U.K. site which multiple threads of Reddit have been talking about. They offer shipping tracking.
https://www.clove.co.uk/products/fairphone-gen-6
https://www.reddit.com/r/fairphone/comments/kkd44p/is_there_a_way_to_get_a_fairphone_in_canada/


That’s kind of a weird question, no? If I’m going to invest in a server, I want to see some kind of integrity and trust first.
This is the first time I’ve seen this link or company name. I’m not saying they’re bad, but I was hoping the person who shared the link had something to vet them.


First time I’ve heard of Unredacted. Do they have somewhere to show their legitimacy.


Removed by mod
Smoothie recipe:
Apple’s (lots of them)
Water
Maple syrup
Ginger (only part not Canadian I’ve yet to find a replacement)
Blueberries and strawberries mix horribly in a smoothie. Never do 50/50 here if need to use both.
Debian is fine, but if you have technical troubles you don’t want to deal with, then go straight to Ubuntu. Either Kubuntu (Ubuntu with KDE), Ubuntu, or some other Ubuntu variation.
As a new Linux user, I would recommend Ubuntu over Debian. It is easier to setup, has a lot more online documentation, provides various apps to make life a bit simplier like integrations and AppStore (even though you should try to away from Linux app store because of broken apps)
Arch is really the king diamond in desktop Linux in my opinion, due to their rolling releases (I love new stuff even if it may break things), but especially because for the Arch Wiki (which is good for other OS users to read too) and the Arch AUR. If going Arch, I recommend using arch-install to make installing it much easier. Update the default arch-install after booting pacman -Ss arch-install then just run.
Also as a new or intermediate Linux user, I strongly recommend LTS (Long Term Support) versions. For example, Ubuntus latest version is not LTS, and has been out for multiple months, and there are still a huge amount of apps not ready to easily install – and you either have to spend a lot of time to figure it out yourself, or lose the chance to use some apps.
True, but then on the upside it’s not a Google phone. Which could be more secure from nefarious back doors.
Also there is a part of the Pixel phone which you’re locked from reformating – Is it the bios or bootloader?