

@flamingos I know. Federated but not the same.
Literal greybeard; 30+ year vegan; Stone Circle enthusiast; Dreadlocked #ActuallyAutistic atheist anarchist; LGBQTIA ally cis male; Anti-racist anti-fascist anti-capitalist; Maker; Shitty artist; Fixer; Upcyler/recycler; Coder; FOSS advocate and Linux enthusiast; Amateur mycologist/mushroom forager; UK West Midlands.
Music: Punk; Grunge; Folk; Psytrance
Bands: Inner Terrestrials; Bad religion; Tarantism; Levellers; 3 Daft Monkeys; Nirvana; Pearl Jam; Soundgarden; RATM; Tool; Foo Fighters


@flamingos I know. Federated but not the same.


@flamingos Thanks. Original still hasn’t made its way across to my Mastodon instance it seems, but I can see this.


@BrikoX Unfortunately lemmy.zip is restricted in the UK because online safety act, so we can’t see your post.
@Uair @linux If it’s running Mint, use the Software Manager wherever possible. Really best to avoid the windows style “download off the web and run the installer” as Linux generally doesn’t work well that way.
Using the SW manager on Mint, you should be able to install network-manager-openvpn and this will add a plugin to the network manager (e.g. wifi icon) to allow adding a VPN connection. Ping me if you need help.
WRT antivirus, personally, I don’t install it, as most malware these days is browser based, but still tends to rely on a Windows or Apple backend, thus usually can’t run on Linux machines. I may just have been lucky but I’ve been using Linux since about 1994 and never had a virus. I’ve also worked as a Linux admin for 15 years, and even run antivirus systems on commercial linux servers, but never had to deal with any infections. On Windows systems, the reverse was true. The most I’ve had to deal with is script-kiddie intrusions on server due to weak passwords or vulnerable software being exploited, neither of which anti-v would have helped with. Having said that, you can install ClamAV if you’d prefer. Will be relevant if you’re intending to install random software off the internet… YMMV!