Qemu would be awesome. But I'm looking for more of an orchestrator. I'm on Arch Linux. Incus looks awesome! https://linuxcontainers.org/incus/
dudesss
Better security and separation of my personal files.
Ask them to make it public!
Bandcamp Friday is in two days. Bandcamp (although maybe Tencent or Epic owned) waves their revenue share.
https://daily.bandcamp.com/features/bandcamp-fridays
Bandcamp Fridays will continue in 2025 on the following dates:
August 1
September 5th
October 3rd
December 5th
Bandcamp uses Pacific time to determine when its Friday so always check this site before you do.
I have no recommendations for versions. Depends in your case.
Although I'll mention that some people don't like that Pixel by default doesn't include the bottom menu on the screen, and uses other swiping features on the screen to do the same thing.
However in your system settings you can change the UI to gave the navigation menu at the bottom of the screen similar to Samsung.
I'm sure there are some public playlist you used to like that you can migrate. Or have shared playlists with friends that have copied them over into their account.
Interesting. I find keeping my screen on, keeping it plugged in, and not putting battery saver can heat up my phone some.
People in this thread mentions setting the phone to only charge to 80%, it will hell extend battery life.
Settings -> Battery -> Charging Optimization
It comes with a music migration tool as well to transfer all your playlists.
I've been loving Qobuz so far. Migrating our family was easier than I thought.
Plus it comes with a free music migration tool.
Qobuz distributed royalties due to labels and publishers corresponding to an average amount of US$0.01873 per stream
This means that Qobuz generates on average five times more revenue per user than the market average,
How much does Spotify pay per stream?
Spotify pays artists between $0.003 - $0.005 per stream on average.
That works out as an approx revenue split of 70/30 - so that’s 70% to the artist/rights holders and 30% to Spotify.
Qobuz sells music as well. It's not just for streaming. High quality downloadable FLAC audio too.
Can terraform (or OpenTofu) be used to create local VMs as well? I always thought it was just for popular cloud infrastructure like Digital Ocean or Google Cloud.