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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 28th, 2023

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  • They changed the refund policy on the Linux phone that they sell.

    At the time when the phone was under development they let people preorder in exchange for a small discount. Many people including myself wanted to support such a product and payed in. At the time the policy was you could get your money back any time before the phone shipped.

    The phone was delayed for years and years and naturally people got impatient and demanded their money back.

    Purism on the fly changed the policy and said you could only ask for your money back in a small window just before your phone shipped. Not before and if it shipped it was too late. They just refused to honor the original policy.

    It was discovered that people could content the attorney General of California and the state would force them to honor the original policy. A lot of people, including myself did this.

    The fact that it came to that makes them a shady company.

    This all being said I am very happy they are profitable. While I would never preorder anything from them again, if they update the phone specs I would consider buying one.

    More Linux first companies is a good thing.





  • There is a lot here but I think the most important thing is that docker containers should always be disposable. Don’t put any data into the container ever.

    All of your data and configuration should be done in volumes. Local disk to inside the container is all you really need.

    By doing this you make updating any given docker container easy as just pulling the newest tagged version of the container. If you are using docker and not podman you can use tools like watchtower to do this automatically.

    As for what distro, it depends on your goals. Do you want to learn and improve your skills? Stick with Fedora or Rocky or Debian or openSUSE. I recommend learning the command line as you go, but if you want a nice UI openSUSE has Yast which is a very robust tool.

    If you want to just have a home NAS but don’t want to learn that’s a different question. In this case if you’re getting a proprietary NAS anyway you could just get one that supports docker (like synology) and kill 2 birds with 1 stone.