I thought Meta had been leading this charge for a decade if not longer.
Need a separate burner-style device for Internet browsing these days (these days meaning the last 15-odd years).
What software systems allow for 'freezing' a system in a particular state, and then upon each reboot returning to that 'clean but configured how I want' state?
I used to use some software called Reboot Restore (or something like that), but that was way long ago and may only work for Windows.
Sounds a lot like a immutable filesystem à la Fedora Silverblue. I don't run it myself but I have a friend who does that saves her a lot of the headaches I've encountered while messing with Arch. Of course it's Linux so if that's a deal breaker then don't.
Also there's plenty of software that avoids changes in disk drive after reboot (for library computers and such). Don't know any example sadly.
> Even Meta
I thought Meta had been leading this charge for a decade if not longer.
Need a separate burner-style device for Internet browsing these days (these days meaning the last 15-odd years).
What software systems allow for 'freezing' a system in a particular state, and then upon each reboot returning to that 'clean but configured how I want' state?
I used to use some software called Reboot Restore (or something like that), but that was way long ago and may only work for Windows.
Sounds a lot like a immutable filesystem à la Fedora Silverblue. I don't run it myself but I have a friend who does that saves her a lot of the headaches I've encountered while messing with Arch. Of course it's Linux so if that's a deal breaker then don't.
Also there's plenty of software that avoids changes in disk drive after reboot (for library computers and such). Don't know any example sadly.
I dont believe it.
The paper:
https://hannesweissteiner.com/pdfs/frost.pdf
really interesting, and scary!