

Neat!
Welcome to lemmy!
Eskating cyclist, gamer and enjoyer of anime. Probably an artist. Also I code sometimes, pretty much just to mod titanfall 2 tho.
Introverted, yet I enjoy discussion to a fault.
Neat!
Welcome to lemmy!
I haven’t found anything that is quite like Macrium. Mostly, because something that works the same way is a bad idea on linux. Because as you suspect, and image backup cannot be done while the partition being imaged is live.
Macrium creates restorable images of your entire boot partition or disk, as-is, which can then be restored onto the same, or an entirely different, disk.
This isn’t really something you can do in linux, with a system that is live. Hence, partition images should be done offline, when the given partition isn’t booted.
That said, everything that matters can be backed up simply by copying the relevant files. For this, I use Kopia.
As for making sure you always have a bootable system, for this I use Timeshift on btrfs.
For MS office, you might try winapps. Sounds like what you’re hoping for.
Are you referring to monitor refresh rate overclocking?
This would not be something you do with a kernel launch option, or DE setting.
You need to be doing stuff with the display server, which would be X11 or Wayland.
This might be a case of Xorg vs Wayland.
Are you trying to use XClicker (which is an X11 application), while running Wayland?
That is bound to cause wierdness.
Huh. Is the bridge up to date and such?
For me it pretty much just works, has for like two years.
You can, but the reason you use a reverse proxy, isn’t revealing your IP or something, it’s that without it, the traffic is unencrypted.
As in, log in details and the contents of media streams are sent fully readable by any network node on the way.
You can try “login-qr” and scan the qr code you get with the telegram app.
Either way, you need to already be logged into telegram in the normal client to login using the bridge.
Yep.
Once an encrypted storage volume is mounted and in use, you just transfer stuff into and out of it like normal.
There’s nothing unusual about the files themselves.
I recently switched to Kopia for my offsite backup solution.
It’s apparently one of the faster options, and it can be set up so that the files of the differential backups are handled by a repository server on the offsite end, so file management doesn’t need to happen over the network at a snails pace.
The result is a way to maintain frequent full backups of my nextcloud instance, with almost no downtime.
Nextcloud only goes into maintenance mode for the duration of a postgres database dump, after which the actual file system backup occurs using a temporary btrfs snapshot, containing a frozen filesystem at the time of the database dump.
It’s not that kind of application. Federation would be massive overkill for a project like Mumble.
It’s a voip server and client for video gaming, with a couple adjacent features sprinkled in.
It doesn’t even really have accounts, and adding servers is just matter of configuring their IPs. What would you even use federation for?
Oh, it’s basic af. But it did what it needed to do, and still does, for some.
I havent used it in ages, I have no clue what sort of stuff continued development has enabled. If anything.
My friend group went first from Skype to the massively better TS3, and finally to Mumble. I don’t remember really missing anything.
There is also Mumble. TS3 era voip and text chat features, but it’s FOSS.
This should be sufficient. Go for it.
It’s a great deck game.
I’d take a backup, first, and then just send it. Then, if that doesn’t work out, do it the hard and slow way.
You’ve got a typo there, it’s RPCS3, not RCPS3.
Is it actually being used?
My guess it just doesn’t evict stuff from before the suspend, starts re-loading stuff after the resume, which makes the apparent amount “used” go up.
On a normal linux system, “free” RAM will over time drop down to zero, as the kernel puts the extra memory available to use. But it doesn’t mean there isn’t room to evict less-needed stuff if necessary.
AFAIK linux only starts actively evicting RAM once it fills up.
Like the other guy mentioned, drill down and see if you can find the actual program causing the problem.