Hmm I see.. Probably because popularity is either Debian or RHEL forks when it comes to servers.. Yeah that's the good thing about open source is inter-compatibility I guess.
BTW this Alpine thing is still under testing personally.. I still need to achieve long term stability. I still am hopeful after what I've been reading from other's experiences.. Thanks!
I've always relied on Docker Hub and compose files (shared on the project page there), and never really delved deeper. It's nice to hear recent Podman on the next release.. So maybe it'll become a viable option again.
I read that RHEL (and folks) is the standard, for Podman. But lately they have been riddled with licensing issues and big corporate nonsense, and found Alpine instead..
Well, hear me out.. This is a self-hosted sub, I just run an *arr suite (lets face it, many here are), and do so in containers.. They are not really distributed as packages AFAIK..
BTW my main nitpick of Debian is the outdated Podman packages.. it wasn't practical to run it there. Otherwise I too was content with Debian. I did mention this.
yeah, but any update failure of a container is less fatal. and only affects the isolated service.. it's way easy to manage this situation than an unbootable server.
wow didnt' know that Ebyte modules were that popular! I've come across them in site like lcsc and Ali.. Making use of them is what my current skill level allows. some of the varieties are relatively expensive though..
Wow, thank you for the very detailed post! I see that impedance matching is an important base subject. Is it covered in standard circuit theory textbooks. I'm looking to use this book. I tried to skim the contents but couldn't find it... Maybe I need to separately learn it? Thanks.
I see, that reference design suggestion sounds good. And it sounds like there's more practical consideration in tracing/routing on top of the theory.. Thanks for the input!
Thanks for the issue... looks like codeberg pages service is down :(