When you copy /home make sure you get the “hidden” files. They start with a “.” and some programs ignore them by default. That’s also where most configuration files are.
Check out rsync -avz
When you copy /home make sure you get the “hidden” files. They start with a “.” and some programs ignore them by default. That’s also where most configuration files are.
Check out rsync -avz
I don’t know for hosting but if you want to get something running quickly Hugo has theme support:
Otherwise you could whip up a few html pages and use tailwindcss to help make things look a little nicer.
Or just do everything manually :)
There’s already a command for it:
The documentation is a little lacking. What exactly is the range of each decide? I see the record of 100+ miles but can I easily connect people within a few miles?
What exactly does this do? Is it just a messaging app?
Linux has directories (folders) that contain programs. The two major conventions are /bin (short for binary which is another name for an executable program) and sbin (system/super user binaries).
Kbin seems like a play off of that, don’t know what the k implies tho.
This is a good post.
As for why people don’t like systemd, it follows the kitchen-sink approach to software and does a lot of things at once.
For people new to Linux I just want to point out - for better or for worse this goes against the Unix philosophy.
Write programs that do one thing and do it well. Write programs to work together. Write programs to handle text streams, because that is a universal interface.
I have firstnamelastna.me. Can you get a little creative with the TLDs?
To answer your question tho hello@firstname.com would look better than Lastname@firstname.tld
You can also do a catch all and use anything@firstname.com (eg google@firstname.com) but those get a little spam happy.
I just looked at most (if not all) the apps I have. They all had the option to select what you see by default.
Holy Necro….since I’m here tho I think kbin is more set up with this. It has a microblog section although I haven’t really explored it.
I wound up with gollum. Git based with a wiki format. Works well enough for my limited use.
https://github.com/gollum/gollum