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Thanks for the response, this makes sense I suppose. I personally like being explicit and knowing-at-a-glance what is currently configured, but I can see some defaults being useful for many beginners for instance, and keeping config cleaner.
Thanks for the response, this makes sense I suppose. I personally like being explicit and knowing-at-a-glance what is currently configured, but I can see some defaults being useful for many beginners for instance, and keeping config cleaner.
This sounds interesting. But in that case, how are headers set? From a security and even privacy standpoint the correct headers can be quite important. How do you enable/disable http2 and http3?
Arch was the distro that got me to stop distro-hopping. It’s stable, it has a rolling release, and it’s mine (as in, customizable, manageable).
I guess, if there’s anything I wish I’d known off the bat is that the Arch documentation is probably the best available. So much so, a LOT of it applies to Linux in general and not strictly to Arch.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Main_page
If something breaks, READ the error messages, understand each component, and check the wiki, there’s a very high chance the troubleshooting section has the exact issue laid out.
I’ve had this, same setup of Androod TV. It stopped happening since I hooked ny Jellyfin docker server to Bazarr. Besidss searching for subtitles for stuff in my library (syncs with Radarr and Sonarr) it also EXTRACTS subtitles so they can be passed on to Jellyfin on the TV as plain-text rather than being burnt in.
The Android TV app just doesn’t play great with embedded subtitles.
I also have a Surface GO 2 and been running Linux for the past 2 years. In the beginning the only “trouble” was that you you needed the surface-linux kernel for drivers, but that’s no longer the case as all drivers have been upstreamed to the mainline kernel.
For distros, anything goes as long as it has a recent kernel. I just go full Arch (EndeavourOS is also a good choice).
What you probably want to pay attention to is the desktop environment - i’ve found Gnome works best for touch and tablet devices KDE requires some tweaking.
For 2, check the flathub store, you might be impressed with what you find for note-taking and PDF editing. Definitely some good options out there for Linux.
3 is a preference. Generally use internal storage for OS and external for data. Linux doesn’t take that much space, so if with 120GB you’re having storage issues, just ditch windows, problem solved, lighter system.
4 Yes it works.