

This is the correct answer


This is the correct answer


See the “usage” section here for more details: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Tor


You can use curl itself, just set a SOCKS5 proxy with --socks5. Simply point it to the address of a running tor instance. So on arch linux for example, install the tor package, start the systemd service and use localhost:9050 as the proxy.
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You are defining the geofilter, but not using it. Try doing “reverse_proxy @mygeofilter mydude:8096”


ligma balls
Check out distrobox. Basically podman or docker containers, but automatically more integrated into the host system. GUI programs work pretty much out of the box with it.


Headscale is pretty light on resources, especially since it doesn’t come with a webui (there is third-party ones like headplane you can use though). RAM usage is like 70mb for me currently.


If you want to have more control about it and become independent of the SaaS offering, you can even selfhost headscale, a FOSS tailscale control server. I run it myself with zero issues.


Maybe Tailscale could be super useful for this!


Nah it’s funny like this. And the voice and music choice are basically tradition for these videos at this point lol


wayland


On Arch+KDE Plasma it’s nearly perfect for me with a RTX 3070
Well snap itself isn’t proprietary, the backend server distributing the snaps is.


Qemu can emulate one architecture on another. And qemu-user can be used to run a single userspace-program on a different architecture.
Maybe something like Elvish or Nushell could be worth a look. They have a lot of similarities to classic shells like bash, but an improved syntax and more powerful features. Basically something in between bash and Python. Not sure about disk footprint or general availability/portability though
They already said there will be less focus on long puzzle dungeons iirc. Although I absolutely loved doing all the puzzles in CrossCode!
Signalis is awesome
ligma balls