I have been pretty lucky with the Aqara plugs. I have like 8-10 of them at this point and they work really well with homeassistant, giving energy readings and such.
Linux enthusiast, family man and nerd
I have been pretty lucky with the Aqara plugs. I have like 8-10 of them at this point and they work really well with homeassistant, giving energy readings and such.
Are you using the default Breeze theme?
I’ve heard such issues can arise with 3rd party themes, so I just stick to Breeze. I’m using Breeze Dark and I have not seen this issue on Plasma 6.1.
You mean like a blog just for internal use?
Maybe SilverBullet can be of use here.
Very nice idea! I didn’t know there was a wake on lan integration. I should try that for my desktop. :)
ETA: how do I install rpm fusion repos on debian? I only found instructions for fedora and rhel https://rpmfusion.org/Configuration
You don’t. rpmfusion is a repo for rpm based distributions. Debian is not rpm based, but deb based. There might be PPA’s for Debian instead.
I’ve used OpenCart before. It’s a bit sluggish, but gets the job done.
All software has glitches and any alternative will introduce a learning curve since they are all different from what she is used to.
So I don’t really have an answer.
I’d say to treat it like a profession and not a class. Like you would a Blacksmith or Barmaid.
Maybe there are some custom profession stuff available somewhere you can build off, but yeah, most of it would be flavor (pun intended).
It’s not something I have encountered in my last 4 years of using Plasma. Maybe some logs will tell you what happened?
I’ve used btrfs-autosnap for a while on Arch and it’s brilliant. Whenever you install or remove something with pacman it creates a btrfs snapshot of your subvolumes and if you have grub-btrfs install too they get added to Grub menu. Very handy.
You can define which subvolumes you want snapshotted and how many snapshots of each you want to keep. Which means it also removes the oldest snapshot when a new is created if it gets over the keep amount.
I think there are som non-free firmware stuff included in most distros.
My wife uses Linux and barely touches the CLI. And when she does, she is only running 1 or 2 specific commands I found for her, that are tied to her needs. But, her main computing device is her phone, so the laptop only gets use a couple of times a month.
Windows (up until windows 8 came out) -> Ubuntu for about a year -> Manjaro for about 6 years -> Arch so far for 2 years.
Mine is about 8W on average.
It’s an Odroid H3 that runs Nextcloud, Jellyfin, AudiobookShelf, a bunch of websites and Home Assistant.
It has 2x Sata SSD’s connected.
This setup is not high speed at all, so it’s not what you asked about. I just answered the headline question. ;)
If any air ventilation fan turns on in the house it uses at least 3x that power, so I don’t calculate the price on my servers power draw as it almost not noticable.
I’m pretty happy with the 2K footage on mine.
Reolink cameras are twice the price of the Tapo ones in my area…
I use TP Link’s TAPO C310 for outdoors and a C200 indoors. They are Wifi or PoE and have a custom component for Home Assistant that works pretty well.
I’ve heard good things about RustDesk. Very similar to TeamViewer.
I use the bookmark manager in Firefox, which I can search through.
Fedora 38 reached end of support in May. So even if you could find an ISO of it, it is not supported at all anymore.