Prisencolinensinainciusol! That song rocks.
phanto
VROOOoooOOOMMM! Hee hee! I got a hybrid standard, and I will drive it until it literally falls apart (or I do.)
Yes!
This is what the community will likely tell you: Gnome is more for "I just want it to work and stay out of my way" and KDE is for "I want it to behave in some crazy fashion, and I CAN MAKE IT HAPPEN!"
I find the opposite.
I get Gnome, and I add tweaks, extensions, desktop wallpaper thingies, task bar nonsense, etc. I get KDE, and I just use it as is.
So clearly, the correct answer is: XFCE! Mwah hah hah!
I once got my hands on. Ryzen that version that kept shutting down in Fedora if you put it under any load, and sometimes just shut down for no reason... I did some googling but couldn't figure out how to keep it from happening. I tried some power state stuff, but never found the right combo.
(I love it. There's something special about an old ThinkPad.)
Dang, I just got a ThinkPad T490, 16GB and 256GB for that price! Trade you?
I tried Bazzite on an old mid-tier gaming laptop, was Mondo impressed. I basically agree with all the things you said. Amusingly, I find that just general purpose computing is snappier and smoother too, so I wound up using it mostly as my surfing/Plex/shopping machine more than anything else.
Feel free to ask questions if you have them. I am no expert, but I am willing to try to help if you get stuck.
- You are going to find people who have done both. A lot of NAS devices run kind of low powered CPUs so separating it out into two devices can get you more compute power than a single device. For example, an old as the hills file bay may cost next to nothing, and then using your "last" desktop will get you a lot more storage and compute than a 1500$ modern NAS, but it'll take up more space, cost more in electricity to run, and make more fan noise. This is the route I went. A modern NAS should be able to run what you listed though.
- TrueNAS scale is all about storage, but it lets you also run containers. Proxmox is all about virtualization, but you can then run a storage solution inside a VM or container. It's not the kind of thing you're going to get a right answer for because either way can work. Both are well-documented, capable solutions. I have tried both at times, but I had a lot more experience with Proxmox by the time I deployed TrueNAS, so I stuck with Proxmox and use a TrueNAS box (bare metal) for backups. It really is a matter of preference.
- If you have a MiniPC and NAS as separate devices, you will want to set up a network share, so you can seed on the MiniPC the copy that's on the NAS. My seeding, Jellyfin, Plex, etc, all happen in a virtual hard drive mounted in a separate container from the services. Each of the services "see that drive as a network share despite being hosted on the same physical hardware.
I use ProtonVPN and it sets up a "leak shield" interface when you start it and destroys that when you end it. It keeps traffic from flowing out over the non-vpn internet. The problem is, if the VPN crashes or doesn't shut down gracefully, that interface kills all traffic.
To test if it's something like that, try pinging an outside address, first by name and then by IP. If you can't get either, it's not the DNS messing you up. If you CAN ping the IP but not the name, then it is the DNS messing you up.
Haha! Eggs. That's a flex!
Thank you, that was very nice! But I do love my car, too.