Your guess is as good as mine, as his time has not opened up at all, quite the opposite. šššāØš¤
!ALIVE
!BBH
!HOPE
!INDEED
!PIZZA
Your guess is as good as mine, as his time has not opened up at all, quite the opposite. šššāØš¤
!ALIVE
!BBH
!HOPE
!INDEED
!PIZZA
Let's !HOPE that Bjorn running a #Qortal node won't take up a significant amount of his time and computing resources !INDEED! š¤ I assume that you simply check once a day if your own Qortal node on one of your laptops is working properly. š§āāļøš¤
!WINEX
!UNICOIN
!HUG
It doesn't take a lot of computer resources, especially with the recent core releases and the new UI. Actually there is a task-bar icon that let's me see how it's doing. I also keep the UI open, so I check things several times per day. šššāØš¤
!HOPE
!HUG
!INDEED
!UNCOIN
!WINE
Let's !HOPE that while you are using your laptop with the #Qortal node, you don't accidentally close it while interacting on Hive or implementing system updates! š¤
!WINEX !PIZZA !UNICOIN !HUG
Oh, no, I keep an eye on it, and I always shut it down before rebooting after updates. šššāØš¤
!HOPE
!HUG
!PIZZA
!UNICOIN
!WINE
There are some Linux distros which love updating themselves often, especially those that have beta updates enabled !INDEED. 𤯠I assume that your Arch Linux is not one of them. š
!WEIRD !HOPE !WINEX !ALIVE
Yep, indeed, I remember that from my Ubuntu days, and you're right, Arch doesn't update until I manually run the command. šššāØš¤
!ALIVE
!BBH
!HOPE
!INDEED
!WEIRD
I can imagine a small group of Arch Linux users who forget to (manually) update their OS, or who simply rely on automated update !INDEED. š¤Æš¤
!WEIRD !HOPE !PIZZA !UNICOIN
Many Arch users don't update their systems for months at a time, and automated updates can go awry in Arch, so they're strongly discouraged, and for good reason. šššāØš¤
!ALIVE
!BBH
!HOPE
!INDEED
!PIZZA
!WEIRD