This is one of the reasons I've never connected my TV to the internet and I never will. I use a mini PC running Linux with a remote and wireless keyboard. It's much more capable than whatever is built into a TV.
This is one of the reasons I've never connected my TV to the internet and I never will. I use a mini PC running Linux with a remote and wireless keyboard. It's much more capable than whatever is built into a TV.
Inkscape is good for making icons, assuming you want vector icons.
I would use exFAT for a shared data drive. Just don't use it for programs since it lacks unix file permission support.
Firefox on android supports addons, so you can install uBlock on it too. If you use an apple device, you are limited to DNS based ad blocking, which doesn't help with youtube.
I'm surprised more people aren't using uBlock Origin. It's an absolute necessity for browsing the web anymore.
Solar panels on your roof won't do much good if you're off grid and need to charge your phone. Just get a small, folding solar panel that you can carry in your backpack. A 10W panel will only need a couple hours of direct sunlight to fully charge a phone.
You can get rid of the certificate errors by adding your CA to Firefox. Just make sure you keep the private key secure.
Set browser.fixup.fallback-to-https
to false
to stop Firefox from trying https if http doesn't work.
That sounds like a good way to get their employees shot.
I'm surprised they didn't put a time limit on the storage since they are not a file hosting platform.
It won't take long for a bunch more sites to pop up to replace the ones that were taken down. The worse the legal streaming sites get, the more pirate sites there will be.
Modern games are not going to run well. Look for a Thinkpad with a Thunderbolt 3 port (make sure it actually has 4 PCIe lanes, some only have 2) and use an eGPU. Retro games will run fine on integrated graphics though.
That's what happens when you don't keep windows locked inside a virtual machine.
You can put a big hard drive in an external enclosure and use it for offline backups. There is no point in paying for cloud storage for something you can just download again if needed. Save the cloud storage for backing up non-replaceable data.
Arch is about as minimal as you can get. You won't even have a text editor if you don't specifically install one. You won't be able to connect to the internet to install that text editor if you don't install the software to configure the network connection either. I made that mistake the first time I installed Arch.
Don't buy anything with a 13th or 14th generation Intel processor.
It works perfectly fine with user agent switcher. Apple just blocked Linux to be assholes.
The data is encrypted and can't even be recovered unless you create a recovery key. Some people don't want their browser phoning home and others just don't want to store their data on someone else's server.
Why not just use bookmarks in Firefox with sync enabled? You can self host your own sync server if you are worried about privacy.
Most of my drives are EXT4, but I started using BTRFS a couple years ago and will be using it on all new installs from now on. I really like being able to make snapshots and compression reduces the install size quite a bit.
That would likely get the user and the torrent client banned from the private tracker.