This is the plot of The Prestige, and to some extent of the survival horror game Soma.
R*dd*t refugee
Fuck /u/Spez
This is the plot of The Prestige, and to some extent of the survival horror game Soma.
I think you’re missing the point here. The solution to the “documentation on a chatroom” problem is not putting documentation on another chatroom.
Actually even further than that, even back in the 80s it was apparently used in certain subcultures to distinguish (drug) “addicts” from “normal people”.
The original meaning of the word as I first heard it back in the late 1990s was to refer to the vast majority of “normal” people who don’t have an interest in or deep understanding of technology and internet culture.
I don’t think it was originally meant as an insult, but more as an acknowledgement and reminder to ourselves that the things we were into and cared about were a niche thing and not exactly the norm.
Nowadays, I’ve heard it applied to just about any niche interest or hobby, for example: people who are not into mechanical keyboards would also be “normies”, and worse it’s being thrown around as a direct insult to people, in the same vein as calling someone “basic”.
The real power of tmux, though, is that it manages the session you created.
So, one use case would be saving your current terminal setup. Instead of exiting the terminal and navigating to the project and setting up the environment again next time, you can simply detach and re-attach.
systemd
: Oh yeah? Hold my beer
sync for reddit was
€1.5 for 10 years of joy
I would suggest to copy paste some paragraphs from https://randomtextgenerator.com/
I find it hilarious to see a +100 upvoted comment that when you try to read it, it’s as if you had a stroke, for example:
Supported neglected met she therefore unwilling discovery remainder. Way sentiments two indulgence uncommonly own. Diminution to frequently sentiments he connection continuing indulgence.
I sorta felt the same before I started to delete… but it felt weirdly cathartic and satisfying once it was done.
The only thing that bugs me now is that there are still comments that I can’t get to. My user profile shows zero comments, but googling my username + reddit, I can still find old posts, and I want them gone too.
I don’t see who WSL is for. People in really locked-down corporate environments?
That’s me pretty much. Locked down low spec Windows 10 laptop that would probably suffocate under the weight of a full VM anyway, so I’m happy to have access to a proper Linux shell with a nice-ish terminal that’s a lot less clunky than “git bash”, MingW etc.
I use it for ad hoc scripting and things like interacting with webservices (curl), massaging text files with tools like jq, sed, awk and to use Azure and AWS cli tools to interact with cloud infrastructure.
At least Reddit lets you delete everything you post
Only the last 1000 comments or so. Earlier comments get dropped from your user profile and become virtually inaccessible, only findable with a google search.
Also, comments from closed subreddits are inaccessible to you, but still there (i.e. when the subreddit reopens, they will become available again).
Yeah that’s not creepy at all.
Technically, Lemmy could go the same way. Even though it’s an free software project, @ljdawson doesn’t own the Lemmy trademark. I think it would be prudent to call it “Sync for Lemmy”.
Also, the name change from “Reddit Sync” to “Sync for Reddit” happened long enough ago that people are probably more familiar with the new name,
This is such a terrible moralizing take …
It didn’t get the same attention because it had already happened, it was terrible, and nobody said otherwise, but there was no mystery or suspense about those peoples’ fates. There was no ongoing story.
The Titan story is in the same vein as when workers get trapped in a mine for weeks, or like those children in a cave in Thailand.
Also: you’re The Guardian, if you felt that the migrant shipwreck story deserved more attention, why didn’t you fucking write about it then?
ssh tunneling can be very useful for testing or one-shot things where you quickly need access to a service that’s not directly reachable, but I wouldn’t use it as a permanent solution for anything. You quickly run into problems like:
localhost:8080
is foo:80
and localhost:8081
is bar:80
Besides, sometimes you protest not to change things, but so that shit doesn’t change you
Great way to put it!
jellyfin
How good is the performance of that on a rpi4? Does it work for transcoding videos?
Brandolini’s Law
It’s best practise to use a reverse proxy like nginx … for authentication
What kind of authentication are you using for nginx? Just basic http authentication with a .htpasswd file?
That’s what I’m using right now, but I’ve found that not all services play nice with it.
I settled on two.
Arch for my desktop, because there I like having an always up-to-date system with the latest drivers and libraries so that I can always try the latest versions of whatever it is I want to play with next. Pacman is also a pretty good package manager, and almost any piece of software that is not in the default repos can be found in the AUR. For the rest, I also like that Arch just gets out of your way and lets you configure your system how you want.
Debian for anything that runs unattended, like all my homelab services. It’s well tested, offers feature stability, has long-enough support, and doesn’t do weird things every other release like forcing snaps or netplan or cloud-init on you. Those “boring” qualities make it the perfect base to run something for a long time that doesn’t scream for attention all the time.