OpenSUSE Aeon is a good example of this in general and I think it is a good example of the way that it is used
OpenSUSE Aeon is a good example of this in general and I think it is a good example of the way that it is used
Missing the 1988 Calgary Winter Olympics torch
We’ve done this with Home Assistant (on a raspberry pi), and Zwave / ZigBee. Its been working great for years. Also allows for really customizable alerts for different things - and has been super stable.
Not very difficult to setup either - the interface is pretty polished these days!
I’ve had a pretty good experience with OpenSUSE Tumbleweed, with a pretty similar use case / criteria.
I’ve done my share of tinkering, and while I learned a lot, and enjoyed Gentoo, Arch, Debian, NixOS, and others (Mandrake, Ubuntu), I sometimes I just want get my work done…
With Tumbleweed, there are a few packages that you’d need to install for codecs, but that’s easily done via the CLI zypper
package manager with a single command.
I’d definitely recommend checking it out - its been a solid daily driver for almost 3-years now with very few issues, and lets me focus on getting stuff done. I wonder if this is due to their QA build process (OBS)?
Anyway, good luck & have fun whatever you choose!
Looks like they don’t allow direct linking to the PDF. I’ve updated the link.
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If you’re looking for a comprehensive beer style guide, I’d recommend checking out the Beer Judge Certification Program (BJCP) style guidelines: https://www.bjcp.org/bjcp-style-guidelines/
It’s a pretty comprehensive beer style guide, for those who want to go a bit deeper into all the variations of beer, with a decent amount of detail on each style.
From American Light Lagers through to some obscure and historical styles such as the Piwo Grodziskie, or Sahti… And everything in between.
I’d be curious how well this approach translates to multi-lingual keyboard layouts. For english users, perhaps theres another benefit to non-QWERTY layouts (e.g. Colemak or Dvorak) after all? … and two factor authentication should remain helpful I presume. Especially physical key methods with no audible characters typed (e.g. Yubikey, Titan, etc.)
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Just checked our major urban centre in Canada, and it’s around 1:450. As a comparison, that makes New Orleans (1:385) pretty well staffed.
Would be cool to find data covering major urban centres across the world for comparisons.
My keyboard’s autocomplete did a terrible job of finishing the sentence for sure… If I kept going it started repeating “good example of this in general” ad nauseum.
But Aeon has been good so far!