In Firefox or any browser based on it:
Open settings > Privacy & Security
Under "Cookies and Site Data" check the box. For exceptions click the "Manage Exceptions..." on the right.
exu
You'd end up whitelisting sob many sites that it makes this approach worthless in my opinion.
Instead I've settled on blocking scripts by default and whitelisting subdomains until the site works. It does require more time and effort, but it's probably the only way to meaningfully block parts of javascript apart from just not using that website.
Depending on how exactly you so this, you'll end up with a huge filter list. Mine in uBlock Origin has 245kB when exported.
Maybe add Geekbench, but only within the same architecture. Tests between different architectures are not comparable.
Maybe we could use this to disable the Intel ME equivalent for AMD on those generations.
You can set up your own CA, sign certs and distribute the root to every one of your devices if you really wanted to.
smash
A lot of stuff on "western" platforms is just the same stuff rebadged for 3-10x the price. I see no reason to pay that much more for the same stuff.
Even better would be taking the train, because it gives you time to study nature, read a book or take a short walk if you feel like it without delaying your arrival.
I haven't taken the time yet to switch my Ansible playbooks to Quadlet, so can't comment on that.
I only skimmed the manpages, thanks for the info.
I use podman mainly because it's very easy to manage using systemd services. Unfortunately, the command for generating these service files, podman-generate
, is deprecated and won't receive new features.
Auto updating is done just using a simple tag and enabling a systemd timer to do it regularly for you.
It's easiest to start with the rootful mode, you won't have additional settings to set and no issues with permissions, UIDs and networking.
For networking, I always create a network per service I want to run. For example Nextcloud and its database would go in one network and you'd only forward the port for the webinterface for outside access.
In addition to networks I also use pods, this basically groups the containers together to start/stop them as one. If you use this, you have to set your port forwarding here.
Not yet, but they'll probably release it as an article on their website soon.
Arch doesn't break all the time either, but it's a meme and therefor 100% true.