How linux works is a great book! Halfway through it right now. I set up immich a while back and as far as I can tell, its almost identical to google photos, and unless you have like a terabyte of photos doesnt need a lot of proccesing power (it will take a while for its first scan, but after that it uses barely anything)
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I'll vouch for most books out of No Starch Press.
I'm not sure how difficult OpenSuse rollbacks are.
I know setting up Snapper to snapshot takes a few extra steps/maintance.
I can say: Aurora, Project Bluefin and Bazzite are all based on Atomic Fedora.
I run more bleeding edge with Bazzite-Testing, Fedora Atomic OS-Tree update and rollback system is really nifty for if you find yourself being weary of "updates" like on OpenSuse.
I've only ever had to rebase/rollback/pin certain images for troubleshooting situations once in ~3 years of use. (dam Qualcomm/Antheros Wi-Fi 7 drivers).
And for the most part is just set and forget. I don't even bother manually updating things anymore. Chromebook-easy.
I know Jorge has a LTS of Bluefin.
And also an Alpha bootc image of GnomeOS.
Debian
Or Devuan or AntiX.
:)
I also have a pretty beefy old PC at home, but it’s currently damaged (I think either the motherboard or the PSU is dead, I didn’t diagnose yet).
Same
Though mine's been dormant for so long, it wont be so beefy in a couple years.
[Edit, PS:
Week 1 was a good read too.
&
How long before you're trying tiling window managers?
]
How long before you're trying tiling window managers?
I never felt the appeal. My understanding is that all windows must be on the screen all the time (but maybe some window managers support workspaces?) and I don't like that. I like to have my web browser windows big, same as my IDE. I have 34'' 1440p monitor and it's too small for me to fit all the windows :)
Tiling and almost all have workspaces as a big feature, also I recently switched to niri, as I don't like vaxry for obv reasons, and it seems to have all the benefits of a tiling wm, but you have infinite space as it scrolls to the right infinitely