theoli@startrek.websitetoLinux@lemmy.ml•Gaming on Linux, How openSUSE Stacks Up for GamersEnglish
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10 hours agoI have a dual-boot Windows partition just for games and I keep using it less and less. Valve has done incredible work with Proton. It has been months since I have booted into Windows, and that’s with a weekly games night where we are generally trying something new every week.
Do you need a “cloud”, as in a programmatic API to access and provision a pile of compute and storage? Or do you mean a “cloud” as in a bunch of locally hosted productivity tools?
The first case, creating a pool of resources with API access to deploy VMs, can be accomplished with something like CloudStack or OpenStack. This is what you would want if you are just handing off compute and storage resources for other teams to provision and deploy software on.
If you are managing internal IT resources and software, especially critical infrastructure like DNS, NTP, virtual routers/firewalls, identity management platforms, then you probably want a a hypervisor solution like Proxmox, or Nutanix or VMware if you have need of the extra features and have the budget for it.
My base infrastructure and productivity suite looks like this: