

No, you need to cross seed. A torrent client that allows for this is biglybt. Or you need to manually re upload it on i2p
No, you need to cross seed. A torrent client that allows for this is biglybt. Or you need to manually re upload it on i2p
Yes that is true. Their are a few bittorrent clients that can cross seed however. But it mainly stays inside i2P which Is good and makes it fully anonymous
I2p is fairly easy to use. The normal I2P client even comes with a torrent client bundled. Also URLs for postman aka best torrent site are included.
I2P is IMO the future for torrenting. The only downside it still has is that their is less content. But that will be solved when more and more people migrate to I2P
I use a a 1080TI. I do some occasional gaming like Minecraft, used to play GTA and the like. Nothing competitive.
Navidrome with tempo if you go the self hosted route
It is a dell ultrasharp U4924DW
I use a 49" ultrawide. I find a window manger work very well with it.
5120x1440p
Edit: one downside is getting proper wallpapers for it that are not stretched or cut
I have read that page and this isnt really what i asked. this is about just snapper not how to setup btrfs to get it working as i explained above
Like I said in the post. To set it up just like Opensuse Tumbleweed. I find snapper quite easy to work with and use to rollback from those bootable snapshots. Also it making snapshots after updates is quite useful too
What do you mean with both?
I would also look in to I2P. Their are a few clients that support it like qbittorrent.
Might be able to disable it with adb?
I have been using a 1080TI for years on Linux. It works fine for the most part. If I am going to build a new system which I am planning to do. I would avoid it.
Bit of a different beast. Not something I would daily drive though. Slackware perhaps. But gentoo other then the docs being top notch and the learning experience being fairly streamlined. It is also a good distro for daily use.
I seed content I get as much as I can to I2P. No data caps here so not really any downside. You do have to limit stuff a bit to not overwhelm your connection at some point
I would argue Gentoo is better suited for that. It is just compilation that can take a long time.
You are over complicating it. I suggest starting out with some sort of VPN. Wireguard is super simple to setup with a wg-easy container