Ask Lunduke some questions! (Just make 'em good and nerdy.)
Bonus points for questions about Alternative Operating Systems and Retro Computing.
Let’s hand the reigns over to all of you for a bit — let the subscribers to The Lunduke Journal decide some of what we talk about.
Here’s how this’ll work:
If you have a super nerdy question to ask, post it in one of three places:
Right here in the comment section of this article on Substack.
In a comment over on this post on Lunduke.Locals.com.
Or as a comment of this post on Patreon.com/BryanLunduke.
I’ll comb through and pick some of the best to tackle — both in articles this week, and during The Lunduke Journal Podcast.
Topics can be anything… as long as it’s good and nerdy. Extra bonus points if it relates to Alternative Operating Systems or Retro Computing. Or Linux… just in general.
If you’re not currently a full subscriber of The Lunduke Journal, there are three (super rad, and super easy) ways to remedy that.
I asked this on LinkedIn already, but I'll bring it here. SUSE announced that SLE is on its way to retirement and ALP / Immutable Desktops is "where things are" now. Given the context, how do you see the future of openSUSE? No more Leap? openSUSE Silvergreen?
Hello Mr nice-smeling Lunduke,
Here's a question/request to the Lunduke community: Can we build our own worldwide LPN (Lunduke Private Network)?
* Make it run on small devices like RaspberryPi and others.
* Peer-to-peer self-hosted and lightweight pages - Essentially, the nodes acts as interconnected headless servers. Something like ZeroNet
* No stinking JS.
* Glorious ANSI art
* Web text browsers compatible first, all others second