

You can run both. There might be issues with the metadata going back and forth. Not sure. Haven’t done it myself. There are definitely people doing this out there.
You can run both. There might be issues with the metadata going back and forth. Not sure. Haven’t done it myself. There are definitely people doing this out there.
That’s the spot all the recent history presidents have sat at for cabinet meetings. Here’s one from 1976. https://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/ford-administration-cabinet-meeting-minutes
Swiftfin works great. Infuse is also an option. Bulk editing is probably on the feature request list. (yep sure is https://features.jellyfin.org/posts/144/editing-metadata-for-multiple-items-at-once) Pull requests are welcome. There is also the JEMM application for metadata edition. Not sure if it still works with the current API.
I was at an event years ago and had the chance to talk with one of the engineers that worked on the Model X. I mentioned the QA and reliability issues with the falcon doors. He took offense to me bringing up that there were issues with the car. Dude. You’re not a good engineer if you look at the product and think it’s perfect. There will ALWAYS be something more to improve upon. If you take feedback poorly, you are refusing the help of others to improve.
Like mDNS?
I continue to be impressed with the Arch community and their dedication to collecting information about Linux into one place. Props to everyone that has contributed! You really are helping users solve problems everyday!
The blue sponges that ate for non stick are softer than the normal green ones. The rough side of the blue ones are safe for non stick assuming your aren’t giving it everything you’ve got.
These ones:
I dive into Fortran77 code regularly. Sweet mother of Neptune! All caps and such short variable names!
Hello!
It’s less than before the first GN rant. IMO It’s much more relaxed and thoroughly written now. IMO The ECC Squad effort is actually working. IMO It’s still mostly dumb, bleeding edge, junk food content; but it’s easier to watch now than before.
It’s not your cup of tea, fine. Then don’t watch.
I used that to turn an HX into a church service streaming cam. The zoom and quality were fantastic! It was far better than that knock off webcam they had before. Literally saved thousands of dollars thanks to Sony releasing that software!
Lol I looked up in Google maps my public transit options to get to work. I gave me Lyft. I live in a major metropolitan area. The problem is that the suburbs all think they can go it alone on transit and then wonder why people don’t use it and then cut service. It’s been 30+ years of trying to coordinate a system for the entire area. It ain’t happening soon.
Yep. Lots of kip feet numbers in engineering. Moments are everywhere and they usually dominate.
I keep a set of notes for each day. I have 2 journals. One for work and one for the rest of life. I use the same system in both. I took the Bullet Journal system of notation and added a few more to handle some edge cases that I encounter occasionally. The system works with any size of journal or pad of paper. I often drop sketches and diagrams in the middle of meeting notes. Actions get carried from day to day. Walk up requests get written down. I know when something was handed off to someone else. I like it! Totally not for everyone though. I skip the monthly and future planning parts. I would probably use that part if I was doing schedule management. Rapid logging is the part that I use all the freaking time.
https://www.tinyrayofsunshine.com/blog/bullet-journal-guide
Notes for small code projects/my network set up get tossed into .txt files. Eh. It gets the job done and there is only one place that file can be and it is the most up to date. Assuming I updated after the last changes. Which is a coin toss when things are busy. Comments in the code are a far more common way for me to keep track of what is happening.
I think the other aspect is the easy to follow discussion threads. IMO it’s the cleanest way to show and follow branching discussions.
HAHAHAHA 😂😂 None of those are Ukraine.
Proxmox can be a bit of a bear to setup. The documentation is not very approachable for new users. It uses a lot of terms without definition which is a deadly sin of technical writing IMO. Guides for getting an Ubuntu Server VM setup vary wildly and often recommend outdated settings.
I’m totally on board with using it though. It eliminates the need to start from scratch when migrating to newer hardware.
Set up your favorite Linux server distro and then go ham on setting up docker (dockge is a great tool to introduce compose).
Just having something that shows the field options and formats it correctly would be fantastic. Tooltips and all that could be added later to lower the bar of entry for new users.
You’re completely overthinking it. I keep white separate. Colors get their own basket. Denim goes in a separate piles after it really smells (it honestly shouldn’t be washed very much). Towels get their own load due to shedding. Sheets sometimes go in with the colors.
I do everything on cold. I use the plainest of plain detergent. If there’s a smell in polyester or nylon clothes I’ll put in some Clorox 2.
Dryer on low or medium until mostly dry. I’ve got a fancy one with a moisture sensor that actually works so I let that determine how long. Usually 25-30 minutes.
Citation: https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/reviews/wirecutter-show-podcast-20240821-better-laundry-secret/
I wrote my own fillet function in openscad. It was a fun adventure to work out the geometry. Next time I’ll use some else’s function.