Given the electronic searching of your electronic gadgets (phone etc) that they can/will do before you get in, I think I've made my lifetime's visits to the US already.
I really wanted to see the Midwest. There was a good person who piqued my interest further talking to me about it here recently.
You should go see Gentoo or something if ArchLinux causes you problems.
It's my go-to rescue cum doing-backups cum new-install distribution because it's clean (meaning low cruft), minimalist, and most importantly, rolling. I run it as a console OS. I adore it.
Have I run it as my Workstation OS? Yes. Would I again? No. It was too fragile then.
Pacman is too strange to use with the options reduced to letters and having to include the double dash every time you remember the long form. Gimme dnf, Aptitude or flatpak.
My daily driver is Fedora. Is my heart in my mouth every six months when 4,000 packages all need reinstalling? Yes.
Have I tried Debian Testing&Sid as semi-rolling? Yes, fantastic, until they did something weird with systemd instead of just doing the conf locations as intended like everyone else. And the weak-dependencies lists were unfunny. Did I mention I loved aptitude?!
Have I tried, source distros (exherbo, Gentoo, funtoo)? Yes, never got any work done. I was always compiling something for that 1% corner-case performance gain.
Don't think I'll try anything else save maybe openSUSE or that NixOS. The first seriously, the second for fun - NixOS smells a tiny bit like Gentoo or ArchLinux to me (sorry, not sorry).
Personally, I think bro needs an immutable Linux OS. Fedora SilverBlue, openSUSE MicroOS, the ArchLinux one.
Then someone needs to write a timer such that when he's really concentrating hard at 2am, it stops and puts some graphical meme on the screen for three hours. Then he'll feel at home.
Probably get myself elected somewhere and use my privileges to screw the country for millions in the same way that my elected representatives have been doing since this century started.
Doing a decent job for the country's citizens seems rather passe these days.
Wow! That's unexpected, because of the memory limitation. I have a Pi3 with Fedora IoT with a target on its back for a Home Assistant container. (I see another comment here notes 400MB of memory use so it seems much smaller than I expected.)
Could I ask how many devices it's dealing with, or because I'm not running Home Assistant yet, whether routine number/complexity is a better metric? (That question went bad somewhere, excuse me.)
Sounds idyllic. Back in the day ('95 ish) Mrs and I flew into Boston and toured the five states around there in about two-three weeks (!) just getting a taster. Went back again later but had mother-in-law and kids with us so look-see wasn't going to happen.
Loved New England, especially the seafood (even the tourist version) but couldn't do the over-commercialisation (ten minutes of programme then five of adverts).
By contrast, I love the looser financial controls. I passed the US SEC Series 7 and UK Registered Representatives prior, so the contrast was immediate.
Being in the middle of nowhere with a media server in the internet age sounds the best of both worlds.
Getting my hands dirty with copper and blowtorches was for fun only. I think I made a mistake - AI is a thing.
There were so many complaints on the forums about it that I thought it was going to be a nightmare, but it's not quite as bad as I was expecting TBF. I just have to be very careful on road merges and those funky country lanes.
Didn't get to visit Pittsburgh so far but would love to, country is a necessarily shrinking resource here these days.
There are specific directives for Audi, BMW and Mercedes which void their warranties should you ever even think such scandalous thoughts as using the indicators individually; not using them to say that you know you're parking in a stupid place, angle across a pavement but you're only buying some chocolate from that corner shop.
My car has lane detection such that my steering is 'corrected' if I don't use an indicator. It gets confused on country roads and often tries to steer into the hedge or ditch. Fucking thing. It can't be turned off long term, but only ever time one turns on the ignition.
UniFi seem to have dabbled with 2.5 GBE briefly and then jumped to 10. I'm guessing that 10 will be the way to go.
You're looking at cat 6A patch leads rather than 7. 7 requires different but RJ45 compatible connectors, I believe. Yes, I'm still trying to understand what the difference is.
I have a 2.5G router, the CG Max. A 1 G switch (waiting for a reasonably priced 10 G) and a 10 G WAP. It's a bit of a mess!
Given the electronic searching of your electronic gadgets (phone etc) that they can/will do before you get in, I think I've made my lifetime's visits to the US already.
I really wanted to see the Midwest. There was a good person who piqued my interest further talking to me about it here recently.