I am born too late to understand what Y2K problem was, this (the result) might be what people thought could happen.
I am born too late to understand what Y2K problem was, this (the result) might be what people thought could happen.
Important things about dual booting:
Configure your Windows to use UTC time https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/System_time#UTC_in_Microsoft_Windows
Disable “Fast startup” in Windows (can possibly cause hardware issues if not disabled and it really doesn’t improve things in computers with SSD)
What do you recommend I do about disk partitions?
I recommend separate EFI partitions while dual booting, I haven’t seem issues with my separate EFI partition setup yet.
If Mint provides Btrfs filesystem I personally recommend looking into timeshift (snapshot software that can be setup to automatically snapshot your computer).
Is disk encryption straightforward?
According to Linux Mint forum, you need to choose an option in “Advanced features” while going through installer, that seems straight forward
Is cloud storage sync straightforward?
Don’t have experience with this but I can tell you: While rclone supports bi-directional sync, you need some setup for make it run periodically.
Should I just use apt to install software?
In the end you have to give trust to someone, I think it’s fair to say if you already choose Mint you probably trust whatever options comes with Mint more than 3rd party options (but is it theoretically possible that backdoored program exists in Mint repository? of course yes).
While my solution isn’t perfect (if someone key logged my computer I am very screwed), I think it’s better than (1) have a much higher chance of losing my 2FA tokens altogether (2) put all hope on Bitwarden being not compromised
Do you want to have 2fa keys on all your devices?
Yes
Doesn’t that defeat the purpose?
I use different password between KeepassXC and Bitwarden. (On my phone one of them is unlocked by fingerprint because I am lazy but not both)
And I don’t store KeepassXC password in Bitwarden.
Syncthing and KeepassXC for syncing 2FA between devices. (I use Bitwarden for passwords)
If your command doesn’t change (doesn’t require dynamic input), sudoers file can make specific command+argument run without password required.
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-unix-running-sudo-command-without-a-password/ (ctrl+f search “A better solution”)
(You can also use wildcards in sudoers file but with nftables I imagine it’s a big security risk)
sudo chattr +i (folder) prevents anything to modify/delete folders and files
Add -R for setting the flag for all subdirectory/files
hmm… I would skip dpkg command in this case.
Maybe try command listed here
https://askubuntu.com/questions/775328/is-dpkg-reconfigure-all-still-available-in-16-04
If you have Ubuntu install USB ready, I can’t see why not try the command.
One of the engineer in my workplace did the upgrade (22.04 -> 23.10 -> 24.04), also end up with broken system, I fixed their Ubuntu by doing these steps.
The best way is to backup whatever is important to you right now, if you haven’t already.
Then I would check/do (No grantee that it helps your case):
Which Ubuntu version does /etc/apt/source.list point to? noble = 24.04, mantic = 23.10
sudo dpkg-reconfigure -a
sudo apt install -f
sudo apt upgrade
Install tailscale from F-Droid not Google Play. I had trouble setting up custom server with Google Play version.
There is a game that is based on the same thinking (Universal Paperclips), you play the rule of “the AI”.
Btrfs doesn’t have built in encryption, if you want to encrypt Btrfs you still need another layer (e.g. LUKS).
Installed from F-Droid and it works without issue, thanks
Tailscale server can also be self-hosted, look into headscale.
From my own experience, I still can’t setup headscale on my Android phone, I think latest tailscale APP fucked up setting custom server function. Don’t install from Google Play
I think that means the access point can only run at up to 80Mhz bandwidth, so not full bandwidth.