For security, Vanadium (only available on GrapheneOS. For privacy, Tor. Most everything else falls between on the scale.
For security, Vanadium (only available on GrapheneOS. For privacy, Tor. Most everything else falls between on the scale.
I’m sometimes super slow at the start of self checkout. If the bags are stuck together, not open, and if I didn’t bring my own, sometimes it takes me 2 minutes just to open a plastic bag. I’m trying my hardest!
I’m not on Debian, but a quick search led me to this wiki link from Arch. Give it a whirl:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/GDM#Hide_user_from_login_list
Edit: context of the Arch wiki link, in case better answers can be gleaned from it, I found it on AskUbuntu: https://askubuntu.com/questions/2471/how-to-hide-users-from-the-gdm-login-screen
Anker Prime Charger (250W, 6 Ports, GaNPrime): $169.99 but there’s a $30 code that shows up for me, which brings it to one penny below your $140 too steep threshold.
Courtesy of Kagi’s Universal Summarizer.


Just did a super quick glance, but are you really considering QKSMS maintained?
You’re one out of 254 usable hosts.


As of my understanding, immutable systems are useful for Devices that are more bound to change, like a Desktop…I do not see much benefit here for a stable server system.
This logic is kind of backwards, or rather incomplete. Immutable typically means that the core system doesn’t change outside of upgrades. I would prioritize putting an immutable OS on a server over a desktop if I was forced to pick one or the other (nothing wrong with immutable on both), simply because I don’t want the server OS to change outside of very controlled and specific circumstances. An immutable server OS helps ensure that stability you speak of, not to mention it can thwart some malware. The consequences of losing a server is typically higher than losing a desktop, hence me prioritizing the server.
In a perfect world, you’re right, the server remains stable and doesn’t need immutablitiy…but then so does the desktop.


Its a 5-year old product. With 5 year old specs.
It’s a Pi. Cutting edge (or even modern or high end) specs have never been it’s selling point or goal.
then rebased to ublue image because it has flatpak included in the image.
From Silverblue’s Getting Started Guide:
Flatpak is the primary way that apps can be installed on Fedora Silverblue (for more information, see flatpak.org). Flatpak works out of the box in Fedora Silverblue…
Just seems very odd to distrohop for one main reason (flatpak in this scenario), without even checking if that reason is available in your current distro…which it is, out of the box.
Most people haven’t, till they have.