That's a trend that needs to die. I blame MacBook airs and ultrabooks for this nonsense.
ChojinDSL
Laughs in ThinkPad running Linux.
Short answer, no. Nobody knows. At least not unless you can accurately predict exactly how many API calls and how much data you will transfer.
Serbia is relatively easy to emigrate to. Getting a passport is not that big of a deal there.
People need to stop caring so much about actor's opinions. I generally assume that most successful actors are vapid assholes, which seems to be a safe assumption considering their environment. As such I feel their opinions on stuff is completely irrelevant.
Yet somehow, in the USA at least, people give their opinions the same weight as if it was some political expert or whatever.
Windows XP pissed me off one two many times.
Yes of course. On the btrbk homepage they even describe how to set it up so that a backup gets triggered automatically when you plug in a designated backup drive.
My setup is to create local snapshots and keep X amount of local snapshots. Copy snapshots to a remote server and keep a different amount of snapshots there. Finally I also have a backup drive and btrbk is setup to copy all my local snapshots to that backup drive when it's plugged in.
So many options. As others have mentioned, rsync, borg, restic, etc. You might want to look into filesystem snapshots. If you use something like BTRFS you can create instant snapshots and send them to a second BTRFS formatted disk or even a remote system with a BTRFS filesystem.
ZFS would also work here.
I use btrbk for automatic BTRFS snapshots and backing them up to remote systems.
If you want built-in encryption you can use Borg or Restic, which also has the advantage of deduplicating within a single backup set. Restic can also backup to an s3 bucket, in case you want to use a cloud service.
Setup jellyfin and pick up a 4k Google Chromecast for your TV. Then use the jellyfin client app on that. Nice and easy.
Well... Right off the bat, I can see what the problem is. You have totally mixed up entries for different releases of debian in there. It's a wonder it hasn't completely broken your system.
Qownnotes with nextcloud.
Proton works on any Linux distro, it comes with steam. As long as you can install steam, you should be golden.