Since HA depends on a lot of python packages, on external softwares and libraries it could not feasible to ensure that the versions packaged with the distribution will always be in line with those needed by HA
Since HA depends on a lot of python packages, on external softwares and libraries it could not feasible to ensure that the versions packaged with the distribution will always be in line with those needed by HA
You should ask this to your favourite distro packagers, not to the home assistant developers.
In any case, it is such a mess of dependencies due to load of optional packages, very active development, that continuously break dependencies on the package repo.
What advantage would bring have a most of the time obsolete distro specific repo? On a maintainer POV this is the typical use case for distro agnostic deployment, maybe flatpak, maybe docker.
Not sure about the specific requirement but here you can find a list of “modern” terminal emulators to look at
Z
Actually it has two GUIs, it has its own web GUI or you can use rclone browser
Yes, thanks. I wrote snap but I actually intended flatpak, D’OH!
Freecad appimage stopoed working
Luckily the FLATPAK version still runs fine
Edit: I wrote snap but I intended FLATPAK Edit 2: weekly builds of freecad from GitHub are working fine
You could also try to ping 8.8.8.8 (or whatever public IP you can remember). If it works it is not getting a correct DNS which results in “no connection”
In this case modify your connection on the laptop to use 8.8.8.8 (google) or 208.67.222.222 (opendns) and check if it works
Well, it is not “90% of people is stupid”
It is more “at any given time, the 90% of people is doing something stupid”, or the equivalent statement “90% of the time people does stupid things”
IIRC math guys call this an “ergodic and stationary” system
With current government it could… Jokes a aside, it is not about the ten commandments, vatican have a civil law mostly inspired by the Italian one
You would have problems with widevine and other similar DRM sh!t
The calibre (Alf) dedrm tool can work on Linux if you have your ADE set up on wine or on a windows partition
Well, good for you. Now let’s prove it