![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8286e071-7449-4413-a084-1eb5242e2cf4.png)
This is a great idea, thank you!
This is a great idea, thank you!
Yeah, looking at these notes, they don’t appear particularly useful for my purposes either. It’s a challenge to find good, ready-to-use material. Thanks for sharing them, though.
If I wanted to use these notes as direct source material for an open source quiz project, would that be okay? I’ve been looking for good, free, open source notes, Q&As, and diagrams but it’s not easy.
I had issues searching for Lemmy communities until I updated my docker-compose to give the “lemmy” container it’s own network.
I don’t know… if joins are so good, why did it take so long for them to show up via SQL? /s
Deep down we all know that writing to flat files is the best way. /s
I feel like putting it in a VM is probably overkill. I just have everything running in Docker containers and it’s pretty good like that.
I generally avoid this situation. At best I’ll create an Rc<HashMap<T, U>> to pass around. I find that having a need for a static variable can be an indication of bad design. It often makes the code that depends on it untestable.
You may be able to use something like lazy_static.
This is very interesting. Why is there a region highlighted (like a large circular paint brush) before the point manipulation occurs? It doesn’t seem to restrict the changes in the image to only that region (ex: the dog ears change outside the region).
I think I’m going to have to buy a wattage meter plug-in to see what my laptops run at with nothing running, a single Docker image of nginx, and then an API image on top of that. I wonder what my RaspberryPi 4 is pulling with my docker images running on there.
Thanks for sharing your solution. I also would have thought that you could auto-redirect within the nginx config from “www” to the root domain, no? Idk if that would have any impact on the SSL functionality.
“Returns to normal”… minus one user.
I had to work out all of the issues myself to get it working on my RaspberryPi 4. For this error, did you add a network to your “lemmy” container that would allow it access to the internet?
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/3167#issuecomment-1595846910
I’m still using 0.17.3, btw. I haven’t checked if 0.17.4 for arm64 is out yet.
Edit: Just checked and it looks like they’re just skipping past 0.17.4 and moving on to 0.18.0 on their docker hub. https://hub.docker.com/r/dessalines/lemmy/tags
Your OLED is sensitive to high temperatures?
I’d love to have an OLED tv. I just need a good reason to get one. The tv I have now works just fine (unfortunately).
If Firefox doesn’t work out I’ll give this a chance. Thanks.
I’m seeing a lot of love for Firefox in here, so I’ll give that a shot. Thanks for all of the suggestions!
Oh, so you have a main router for internet traffic (wifi access for extended router and other devices) and another router extended from it that both your VR headset and PC connect to for VR-type data communication, still providing internet to the PC with about half the bandwidth?
That’s strange. Please let me know what you find out.