on my NAS i do and work data as well.
USE EU VPNs let them block the EU.
encrypted separately like by album you can, even have rclone change the name and use hashes then it does not matter what you use long as they’re keep your data safe. also it is best to keep a copy in the EU and US if you can.
Not a Bug.
I been using TP-Link Matter junk with Home Assistant.
it means once all of this is added to the desktop OS you use, it will be plug and play for Nvidia GPU’s.
Samsung has a setting for 85%, i know my phone only charging to 85% does not get as hot.
Proxmox, TrueNAS, Debian with cockpit etc. really any type 1 hyperviser work’s.
Maybe your HBA is having issues? or a Drive is Failing? have you done a memtest? you may need to do system wide tests, it can even be a PSU failing or a software Bug.
also TrueNAS is built with Docker they use it heavily something like 106 apps, Debian has good ZFS support, but you will end up doing a lot of unneeded work using Debian unless you keep it simple.
ZFS is by far the best just use TrueNAS, Ubuntu is crap at supporting ZFS, also only set your pool’s VDEV 6-8 wide.
AMD’s CPU and GPU firmware is non-free.
TrueNAS, and Debian
I been using a Intel n100, you can get a box for just over $100 and use a cheap USB 10TB HDD.
Use a VPN to check for a bottleneck, my ISP will cap my downloads from Steam to 10MB/s with a shitty VPN i get 25+MB/s.
Yes, it is just using our Data bases. what people are calling AI is a chat bot on Steroids and Meth with lots of stolen data, if the mass lawsuits win, a lot of this AI Stuff will be gone overnight.
You’re talking about Debian experimental, Debian experimental > Sid > Testing > Stable, Sid is about the Same as Arch, or Fedora around new release’s a lot of people only use Sid and testing they’re only a few days apart, it is a common used OS for Desktops/Gaming, OP was asking about Debian and a Fedora based OS.
Also DD’s don’t backport Mesa anymore the Dev who did stopped years ago.
For Gaming Debian SID if you want Debian.
Microsoft has a how to for Installing Linux on the desktop.