If I remember correctly mnt is for static media that you expect to always be present and media is for removable media which may come and go.
If I remember correctly mnt is for static media that you expect to always be present and media is for removable media which may come and go.
What are the chances of an official flatpak getting maintained so us lazy folk don’t need to keep up with the GitHub repo/site for when updates drop?
Edit: Also do you have any plans to add NX support?
BSD, Haiku, Plan9, RiscOS, etc. Probably mostly BSD.
Debian is only as boring as you want it to be.
iMac G3
wow, an operating system on a computer, sounds so improbable :P
We had a fancy coffee machine at an old job that ran Linux. If I remember correctly it was a top of line cafection or zulay machine. One of the ones with a touch screen. Just booted off an SD card as well iirc so probably would have been pretty easy to hack on.
I still find it weird that managed switches run Linux as I generally would think that at those data rates they’d need something closer to the metal but with the magic of HW offloading that’s been a thing in enterprise for a while and OpenWRT even supports some consumer grade ones now.
Some (probably most) ebook readers like the Kindle.
Many newer cars.
TI NSpire calculators.
A slow cooker. https://www.linux.com/news/crock-pot-slow-cooker-wi-fi-smarts-hands/
A cable modem. Specifically the Motorola SB6120 can. Maybe others too.
WiFi enabled SD cards. https://elinux.org/Wifi_SD
A dead badger. http://strangehorizons.com/non-fiction/articles/installing-linux-on-a-dead-badger-users-notes/
Some of the smart thermostats almost certainly do. Also this one 100% does. https://hestiapi.com/
You probably just need to chow. The directory