From my experience with tailscale so far - there are so many different ways to have it configured well. If it works well for you having it on the host, then go for it. I have home assistant in a VM with tailscale and tailscale on the (windows) host. This works well for my needs and I don't mind having it running "twice"
superweeniehutjrs
Google gave up on their version of DeX or whatever? Good
Multiple versions, paths, and installs of Python. Using pip makes it worse.
I still don't fully understand how to gracefully have multiple desktop environments and switch between them. When I want to try something new to me like lxqt, I usually spin up a VM.
The wires need to be perfect so they align properly so the proper amount of turns can fit in the housing.
I will not answer your question, but instead share a detail. When I finally found sunglasses that look good on me I bought two pair. I plan to buy a third of the same soon, assuming my prescription have changed much. Thanks Shaquille O'Neal.
For a moment, I thought it was a heat lamp and it was warming its ass.
That's great, but it should still be possible and well documented for people to run things natively. Some people want less bloat for technical reasons (maintaining a product with very little storage or memory). Tinycore Linux is my go-to example of the benefit of keeping things lightweight for a purpose.
The next steam deck is gonna be amazing. I mean the current one is, too
At least Germany doesn't require a visa for us citizens