

I tried Joplin for a while but dropped it, too simple. Also tried Trilum, which I liked more but it’s still a very young project.
Eventually, my Obsidian vault will go there, but not just yet.
I tried Joplin for a while but dropped it, too simple. Also tried Trilum, which I liked more but it’s still a very young project.
Eventually, my Obsidian vault will go there, but not just yet.
*Employees" are outsourced vendors that can’t afford to say no to executives, most likely
Rather than give you specific recommendations, here’s some guidance for parts
Mobo: The more slots you have for RAM and storage, the better.
CPU: literally anything. More cores and faster cores are ideal, but CPU requirements for these things are generally lower than a desktop.
RAM: Buy 1 stick of the fastest and highest capacity RAM your motherboard can handle. When you’re ready or you start to see slowdown, buy another of the same stick. You can get far on 16-32GB, you won’t need much more until later.
Storage: an SSD for the OS and one or more HDDs for storage.
PSU: generally anything in the 500-700 range will be good. You’ll want more if you plan to put a GPU in, though.
I’ve been using 10 LTSC for a few months now, it works great with the few Windows-only apps I still use. I mainly use it to organize my media library, but it’s not had any problems with the few games I’ve installed with Kernel-level anti-cheat (Destiny 2, Delta Force)
I had to download the Xbox Accessories app to control my Elite controller, but that’s really it.
I didn’t see nuffin
Keep the pressure on him. I wanna buy The Boring Company for $6 and a Hot Topic gift card
You might want to set up dynamic DNS for your domain. If you’re hosting from a residential internet connection then your ISP will change your address eventually. Ddclient can be used to report your current IP to your Registrar regularly, so if it changes the domain moves along with it.