It's probably just not worth it. MS makes the vast, vast majority of thier money on Windows licenses from the corporate sector and OEMs. Any revenue "lost" to MAS is a rounding error on thier toilet paper budget for thier offices.
Both those posts on reddit are people being paranoid (especially the pchelp post, that user is self-admittedly ignorant), perhaps not wrongly, but it is open source and used frequently enough I'd imagine someone would have said something if there were issues.
Personally, I've used it probably 3-4x without any issues. Take that for what you will.
EDIT: Manual instructions are here if you wanna be really, really sure.
It's getting up there in years but I'm running a Dell T5610 with 128GB RAM. Once I start my new job I might upgrade cause it's having issues running my MC server.
I have no particular suggestions for the Pi, but for the x86 box I'd go headless Arch, install docker and go from there.
Also, I'd personally suggest switching to something that's not Manjaro. Arch has an install script now which I really like, but there's also distros like EndeavorOS that don't have a history of letting thier SSL certs expire multiple times like Manjaro does…
Not super likely, and I don't think I'd expect updates from Tuya directly unfortunately. What the other person was saying about getting it supported through ZHA is likely your best bet.
If this is one of the new ThirdReality bulbs, they allegedly need an OTA update accordong to an amazon review or two. Mine is coming in tomorrow so I'll report back.
"There are a lot of ingredients in cosmetics, hair care and sunscreen that can act as endocrine mimickers in a lab, meaning they kind of act like a hormone," Waldman explains.But He stresses that, when it comes to chemical sunscreen ingredients, the potential link largely comes from animal studies that likely don't translate to humans. For instance, in many studies, researchers are feeding large amounts of these ingredients to mice, He explains, which is "not really comparable to a human situation."
each CPU core goes to >100% which is not good for the system for long periods of time
If you don't have effective cooling, maybe, but I've never heard of any reason to keep core utilization under any specific percentage. Are your temps an issue?
That's the funniest thing about this whole conversation: I do. Quite regularly. It works fine. Better than HTTP for my usecase. No clue what the fuck you people are on about.
Pretty sure calibre makes this easy if you don't wanna reinvent the wheel