When you ask why, some people answer why not
Can I say that I think “off of” is the ugliest language construct I have ever seen?
But how else could you possibly say, “Get that weak shit off of my track?”
Perhaps you just don’t like it in places where “from” would be appropriate…?
well that means something different. in @Telorand@reddthat.com’s example, off of
would imply taking the car or whatever physically off of the track, even if only by a few feet, while away from
would mean something further removed, like out of the complex or down the street.
How about Nextcloud? If that works, you could host Nextcloud on that computer and use that for booting another computer. Better yet, you could make several layers of bootception that way. Here’s how. Computer A runs whatever distro + Nextcloud and hosts an Arch image. Computer B uses that image to boot up only to run Nextcloud and another image of Arch. Then computer C uses the image hosted on B that and so on. If you want to aim for the next level circular bootception, you make computer A use the image hosted on computer Z.
Locking, since it’s a duplicate from last week… https://programming.dev/post/16349345