Are there open source APs? I was under the impression that everything required binary firmware (even if running something like OpenWrt).
Are there open source APs? I was under the impression that everything required binary firmware (even if running something like OpenWrt).
Ya I’m confused why the GitHub repo isn’t updated to 115 and it’s archived…
The Thunderbird team periodically does this and holds back upgrades for existing installs.
The Flatpak author is waiting for Thunderbird’s approval before publishing 115.
https://github.com/flathub/org.mozilla.Thunderbird/pull/306#issuecomment-1632388273
I like Flatpaks for running proprietary software (Slack, Discord, Spotify) because I can use Flatseal to lock down permissions for each app.
I also agree with someone else that said Flatpaks don’t really integrate well when they need deep system integration.
I really like that Flathub now has a verified section (as opposed to some random person packaging the application).
This is definitely an over-engineered setup…
I store my Docker Compose files in an internal-only git repo (hosted on Gitea).
Drone is my CI/CD system, and I use Renovatebot to look for updates to container tags (never pull latest
). My workflow is this:
master
) kicks off a Drone workflow that does the following:
git pull
, then docker compose -f "$D" pull
and then docker compose -f "$D" up -d
.I’ve written about step 3 here.
This means I never manually update Docker Compose files, I let Renovate manage everything, I approve PRs, then I walk away and let the scripts run.
I also run a single-node K3s cluster that is hosted on GitHub. Again, using Renovate to open PRs, and I run Flux so watch for changes to master
, which then redeploys applications.
This is the correct answer.
From their FAQ. So it seems there are free 802.11n APs…