What really matters is the wattage needed to cool the space. That's really it. The less energy used, the less the strain on the grid, or the less solar capacity needed.
Go in blind and avoid looking anything up if possible.
Enjoy!
Forests don't need deliveries. And good luck flying planes anywhere over just forests.
There's a reason the FAA has the regulations it has.
I'm contractually obligated to harass you about that key rotation slip up.
There is so little unoccupied or public land in places where people want to live. It would be impossible if that was the rule.
Look at Bluefin or Aurora. They are also made by Universal Blue and have developer versions that come with Tailscale VPN. They're built on Fedora Silverblue just like Bazzite. I personally just moved to Bazzite two weeks ago, and then switched to Aurora.
EVERYONE deserves a liveable wage, including the people you mentioned.
I get that, but they deserve to be paid a livable wage like everyone else.
Oh man, I loved this game. I didn't know this about the PS2 version.
No, because it's a software KVM and it needs to be able to read, mirror, and suppress mouse and keyboard actions.
Setting up is stupid easy. What makes immutable distros potentially difficult is installing software. Anything packaged as a flatpak is stupid easy. Beyond that it can get complicated. But it's not bad in general.
Having just switched to Linux with Bazzite two weeks ago, my biggest issues have come from Wayland support. And that's really just because I have a specific piece of software I need that doesn't support Wayland. And that's a bit of an edge case and the result is more annoyance than show stopper.
I'm literally switching from Bazzite to Aurora right now.
Bluefin and Aurora are the same except they use Gnome and KDE respectively.
Each offers a general purpose version and a developer experience version.
A high effort to profit ratio would mean a lot of effort for a little profit.
This is an excellent video on how people still believe in this nonsense. https://youtu.be/5pYeoZaoWrA
I've always been too much of a cheapskate curmudgeon to pay for food delivery and I've been increasingly baffled by people who pay hundreds of dollars a month to have cold, soggy fast food delivered at an eye watering premium.
I get laziness, I really do. For me, personally, going to pick up food is the lazy option.
Font of youth?