featured [he/him, comrade/them]

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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: November 20th, 2021

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  • Reenable the firewall with

    systemctl start firewalld 
    

    Then get the current networking zone with

    firewall-cmd —get-active-zones 
    

    It will likely be called FedoraWorkstation, if not just replace that name with whatever it is called in the following steps.

    Next you should enable the ports for Moonlight, which from a quick ddg search I think this should do it:

    firewall-cmd —zone=FedoraWorkstation —permanent —add-port=47998/udp
    
    firewall-cmd —zone=FedoraWorkstation —permanent —add-port=47999/udp
    
    firewall-cmd —zone=FedoraWorkstation —permanent —add-port=48000/udp
    
    firewall-cmd —zone=FedoraWorkstation —permanent —add-port=47984/tcp
    
    firewall-cmd —zone=FedoraWorkstation —permanent —add-port=47989/tcp
    
    firewall-cmd —zone=FedoraWorkstation —permanent —add-port=48010/tcp
    
    firewall-cmd —zone=FedoraWorkstation —permanent —add-port=47990/tcp
    

    Then reload the firewall with:

    firewall-cmd —reload
    

    Lmk if that works

    Edit: added more ports needed for the WebUI and controller support. Check the docs here if you wanna see what each port is used for




  • You’ll have just as good of an experience on either Intel or AMD. Framework is releasing a new generation of intel models in August so if you want the most cutting edge model and can wait those are a good bet. But personally I’m very happy with my current gen AMD model’s performance and efficiency so I’ll be waiting a while before another upgrade. There really aren’t any major downsides for any of the current options though, just personal preference.


  • I have a framework 13. Bought it with 12th gen intel mainboard, upgraded it to AMD when that came out. Also upgraded the battery, RAM, and soon the screen when the 120hz one ships. It’s super easy to get into, just five screws and then pop the trackpad/keyboard cable off. I honestly love it.

    Framework has fantastic support for windows and Linux. There used to be some minor fixes needed on certain models but they’ve since resolved them and my experience on Fedora and Arch have been plug and play. On windows they have a driver install script that installs everything in one go, that’s nice too. And yes Minecraft does run on Linux, at least the Java version does. Idk about bedrock though








  • Instead of installing packages through a package manager one at a time and configuring your system by digging into individual config files, NixOS has you write a single config file with all your settings and programs declared. This lets you more easily configure your system and have a completely reproducible system by just copying your nix files to another nixos machine and rebuilding.

    It’s also an immutable distribution, so the base system files are only modified when rebuilding the whole system from your config, but during runtime it’s read only for security and stability.