Have you tried llama.vscode [0]? I use the vim equivalent, llama.vim [1] with Qwen3 Coder 30B and personally feel that it's better than Copilot. I have hot keys that allow me to quickly switch between the two and find myself always going back to local.
This year I redid my whole lab as well and prioritized declarative everything so it'd be easy to go from scratch if needed. So I've got nix to create RKE2 images with cloud-init for XCP-ng templates, Terraform with XenOrchestra provider, and ArgoCD for the K8s cluster.
I've got two R640's so I can live migrate, and an R720XD with TrueNAS (democratic-csi for K8s persistence). QSFP (40Gb) for TrueNAS / R720XD, and SFP+ (10Gb) for R640's linked to a Brocade ICX 6610.
So I can update the hosts, and K8 nodes with 0 downtime. Do I need it? No, but I learned a lot and had / have fun deploying and maintaining it.
The current version of Bitwarden straight up doesn't work in Orion [0]. I ran into this yesterday when setting it up for the first time. Wasn't a great first experience as it's literally the only extension that is a deal breaker to me.
I'm still giving Orion a chance for now... I just installed a slightly older version that works.
FWIW I've been running a jailbroken PW5 for a few years now always connected to the internet without any issues dealing with updates.
I did rename the ota binary. I'm aware that there's always the possibility of Amazon maybe having some other way to push an update, but I haven't had any issues so far.
Good for you, but you can't count on buying a new device and having it be jailbreakable. For someone deciding what to buy it's not a good option. It's also a lot of work and worrying over something you bought and paid for.
I've got the same generation PW and have it jailbroken running KOReader. I've considered trying other readers out, not because of issues but rather shiny new thing reasons. But at least when it comes to KOReader, it seems like the PW are the best if you can jailbreak the version you're on.
(I want / need it to run KOReader because I wrote a small Lua plugin for it that syncs reading stats (words per minute, minutes read per year, etc) to a centralized server.)
As someone who used CrowdStike daily and worked as an MDR Analyst and Engineer at a top ranked MDR provider, CrowdStrike is a very capable piece of tech.
While the driver for purchase is almost always to pass audits, it's still a good product.
[0] https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.vscode
[1] https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.vim
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