I'm wondering what Linux distributions would be most secure or least affected by a massive cyber-war. If there was ongoing cyber-war that targeted banks and other critical infrastructure, so much so that people would be left with no money and possibly unable to heat their homes for months, what Linux distribution would survive the best under those circumstances? I've been using Ubuntu, but if Canonical has to cut its workforce substantially then they might not push out the fastest security patches and updates, which would be critical in that kind of environment. I was thinking Arch Linux might be better suited, because it's more community driven and rolling release.
I want to know because if large websites go down, then we (Server Admins) will need to be there to supply critical cyber infrastructure to those who can still get on the Internet. Lines of communication are always key in wars.
I don't believe they ever did, atleast with the iTouch I know it was not the same. With the LG Dare I would either force my fingers too hard or too little making a cascade of typing errors.
I had a hand-me-down flip phone before this one, but this one was the first one I can say was mine. And I disliked it very much, a pressure-sensitive touchscreen is awful.
Yeah! I think I only heard about Astro through one of your posts! I'm not really familiar with java/typescript, so I borrowed the code from https://soapbox.pub/servers/. If you want feel free to contribute.
Looks like the [dockerfile](https://gitlab.com/soapbox-pub/rebased/-/blob/develop/Dockerfile#L18) builds from source. I'm looking for an easy to use URL to download binary-like releases, at the moment I'm using "https://git.pleroma.social/api/v4/projects/2/jobs/artifacts/stable/download?job=amd64" to always download the latest Pleroma release.
Believer in Jesus Christ✝️. Saved in 2019, and continually passing from glory to glory. I use Linux and enjoy free software. Ansible is cool and so is Fediverse.