deleted by creator
deleted by creator
The real story sounds even weirder. They took his work permit for the sole purpose of stopping any integration that could hinder a later deportation. Wtf. Fachkräftemangel my ass.
What’s your hoster?
These pizza burgers are absolute dogshit. The bun is incredibly dry, crunchy and stale. But at least you are rewarded with some tasty third degree burns in your mouth. “Easy to eat” my ass lmao.
Looks very broken on mobile.
I have found it: fka boursin - coma (original mix)
Finally my mind can rest
At Home:
On the go:
I wrote my own scripts to tag the music and encode it to FLAC and Opus and use syncthing to copy the files to my phone. So whenever I add an album to the library it will be available every where I want in the specified format without any manual copying involved. It’s a little janky but has worked surprisingly well for years.
Check out Wolfgang’s Channel on YouTube. He goes very in depth on low power consumption home servers.
That’s the biggest issue of smartwatches IMO. They will all end up in a landfill after approximately 5 years while you’ll be able to give that Timex (or your F91W that costs less than a pizza) to your grandkids.
Exact Audio Copy and Qobuz.
python -m http.server
came in handy so many times!
Damn I hoped it was this clown orban
Lmao, chinese tea ceremony includes like 500 steps.
Honestly the most complete source of high res music is private trackers like redacted. You can download all the stuff from qobuz and bandcamp, every CD rip you can think of in bit perfect quality of and even very good vinyl rips. You basically can download any version ever released from any album.
Yes, that’s a good alternative for Collection[str]
but not so much for Iterable[str]
as you lose the lazyness of Generators.
Maybe something like passing in a list of patterns which should match some data, or a list of files/urls to download would be examples of where I would like to be generic, but taking in a string would be bad.
But the real solution be to convert it to foo(*args: str)
. But maybe if you take 2 Container[str]
as input so you can’t use . But no real world example comes to mind.
Yes, you’re right. It also a lot of benefits.
This + an assert seems like the way to go. I think that str
should never have fulfilled these contracts in the first place and should have a .chars
property that returns a list of one-character-strings.
But this change would break existing code, so it is not going to happen.
str
matches most of these contracts, though, requiring additional checks if a str
was passed or one of these collections containing strings.
Banger