Even close to the end (I’m a Zillenial, likely only a bit older than you) Peart’s solos were an absolute work of art. That rotating drum stage…
Even close to the end (I’m a Zillenial, likely only a bit older than you) Peart’s solos were an absolute work of art. That rotating drum stage…
Maybe you should give them a try. Signals is a really approachable starting point, IMO, but 2112 is a better hard sell.
Just don’t listen to Power Windows, Hold Your Fire, or Presto until you’re heard their hard prog stuff. I like those albums, too, but things got a little weird when Getty went hard in the synths.
I’ve been using this happily for a week now. Much easier to configure than I feared!
Sounds like livesync is a decent option, too, if you run a home server like me. But I believe some users have lost data so I’ve stuck with SyncThing-Fork for now. No battery life hit that I can see.
Capy and Read You are both solid Android FreshRSS-compatible reader apps.
Or changing or just adding a system font.
Or setting a charge capacity limit.
Or adding separate quick access tikes for wifi and cellular.
I wonder if Valve will eventually offer their own system of checks similar to Google Play Integrity? I don’t think I’d care for it since it’s an invasion of personal choice on a device that you own, but for people who want to play competitive games with cheating problems, running a partition with integrity checking seems a fair trade.
Any routers looking good to you yet? I keep debating building a custom Linux home server box with a beefy wireless card that can double as a home server and NAS. Because very few routers look good to me and I’ve been thinking of upgrading my home server anyway.
Wish the EU would start a lawsuit against them for that. It is blatantly anti-competitive and responsible for the death of so many messaging apps.
But I guess the EU is content with non-interoperable Whatsapp harvesting and gatekeeping the personal communication of almost every citizen. Even worse than Google Messages IMO.
Ah, a history would be nice. I’ve been thinking of keeping some stats to monitor when the connection goes down, and how often my IP changes.
Fortunately I’ve kept the same IP since i changed ISPs a few months ago.
Personally I still think docker is overkill for something that can be done with a bash script. But I also use a Pi 4 as my home server, so I need to be a little more scrupulous of CPU and RAM and storage than most :-)
exactly. I literally have a bash script that calls the API triggered by cron every 30 minutes. That’s it. Are people seriously using a freaking docker container for this?
Do iPhones bypass charge when you set a charging limit (or leave them plugged in at 100%) as well?
It’s branding, mostly. The phones had a notch. Design language dictates that the laptops can too, since it’s Totally Not Ugly (but it is).
Also, macbooks are slightly taller (16:10 aspect ratio) than most Windows laptops (16:9). Slightly taller even with the notch, since the extra screen is on top of the 16:10. So there is admittedly not much room to fit a camera on top. Personally I would prefer a slight bulge at the top and a rectangular screen, but with a black background, it isn’t too awful. Drives me mad with any other colour, though, I just can’t unsee.
The first three books are solid. More philosophical and light on character detail than most fantasy, but an interesting style. I especially like the fact that Le Guin avoids fighting, actively subverting the “final battle” trope.
The later books are kind of like the Brian Herbert Dune books: some shared characters and setting, but wildly different in style. 5 is actually a solid collection of short stories, but 4 and 6 are honestly a bit of a slog. Half-baked concepts. Better character writing, but a lot more goat herding and self-loathing internal dialog than I like my my SFF.
Read books 1-3; they’re short, and a reasonably completr story. If you want more, read 5. It doesn’t spoil anything in 4, and is the best of the ‘second trilogy.’ If you STILL want more after that, read 4, then 6. The conclusion is good, but not worth all the feminist hand-wringing (and I say this as a feminist hand-wringer).
Says it all. FF should focus on providing a browser engine competitor to Chrome/Google, not squandering money on rebrands. At 5% (or less?) market share, their core market of tech nerds, and even their near horizon of potential users don’t even respond to this bullshit.
Classic FF android bullshit.
Plenty of time to reorganise a menu that works just fine.
No resources to give us theming add-ons or even a basic OLED black theme. Let alone allow any other UI customisation.
My use-case is quite basic: a single combined home server/NAS, and two remote workers. My biggest obstacle, historically, was buffer bloat, which really really annoys me in video calls. I’ve got it to an acceptable level these days but it still isn’t ideal.
In a perfect world, I’d have a single home server box that does wifi, routing, NAS, jellyfin, DNS, movies, freshRSS, backups, and a few other tasks. And then I’d eventually build another and mirror data between the two in another location for redundancy. But I haven’t found anything that can handle it on mostly FOSS, long-term-security-updated software (10 years minimum), with no required subscriptions, with easily repairable or replaceable hardware. This seems to be getting really close, though! Official openVPN support for a piece of hardware would go a long way. I made a mistake buying a router in the past with a poorly supported CPU and I don’t want to make a similar mistake again.
I’m not sure WiFi 6 will be “obsolete” in even 10 years, let alone ‘soon’. I’m still using AC just fine at home. If your ISP sucks as much as most, you won’t benefit from much anyway. Maybe the new frequencies could help for apartment dwellers, or the intranet speeds could help if you transfer a lot to and from a home NAS?
Fortunately I set up unbound ages ago, and disabled every other upstream option in my pi.hole. However, I imagine that still “leaks” some information about my DNS queries, just indirectly – it’s not like my pi.hole has every domain mapped all the time!
Thanks. Wild that folks build SSH and HTTP around the same time without realising that HTTP could benefit from some of that same tech!
Thank you so much for all you’ve done.