I rub Debian Sid/Unstable on both my desktop and my work laptop's WSL2 VM. I use Debian for a lot of reasons, but I think one of the biggest is it's the "lowest common denominator" for the entire tree base and beyond, and thusly works as much.
Some tool only offers Ubuntu install instructions? It'll work.
Something needs to be installed from source? Any needed build tools are at most an apt install
away.
"Help I can't figure out why my systemd
service isn't starting in Arch". Pending systemd
version incompatibilities, there's likely nothing Arch-specific about that problem.
Debian has always felt like, I dunno, Latin. So many other languages are based on it, or somehow arrived at the same way to word things despite it, and so once you understand it you can mentally tie all kinds of things together when you run into something in a different language (read: OS).
Not sure what you mean, I'm typing this from my Pixel 7a which I unlocked with my face.
I was about to reply and say "nuh uh, the Minecraft wiki isn't a Fandom one", but jesus you're right.
As an American, same question for OP.
Do you have a link to the year-old info for context? I'm curious why people would be interested in federation of a DVCS like Gitea et al?
Not that I'm aware of, but the source Markdown files are here, so you could probably make one with e.g. pandoc if you wanted.
Echoing the sentiment that you should adjust your perspective in approaching containerization, otherwise you're in for a tough time.
Jerome Petazzoni, one of the more recognizable names in the container community, has a site where he puts all of his workshops, slides, etc. This is his one for getting started with Docker.
Echoing the sentiment that you should adjust your perspective in approaching containerization, otherwise you're in for a tough time.
Jerome Petazzoni, one of the more recognizable names in the container community, has a site where he puts all of his workshops, slides, etc. This is his one for getting started with Docker.
fwiw Ansible uses Jinja under the hood, which itself is a templating engine.