Yep. Retro-futuristic / art deco is kind of my vibe. Like, I used cheats in Bioshock just so I could walk around undisturbed and admire the architecture.
I’m surprisingly level-headed for being a walking knot of anxiety.
Ask me anything.
I also develop Tesseract UI for Lemmy/Sublinks
Avatar by @SatyrSack@feddit.org
Yep. Retro-futuristic / art deco is kind of my vibe. Like, I used cheats in Bioshock just so I could walk around undisturbed and admire the architecture.
I think this from Burnham’s quarters is the only modern one I’ve seen that I would really like to have.
But what I really want are these:
I must have really old tastes in light fixtures. Every one of the lamps I liked were designed in the 50s/60s and are long out of production lol.
Soooo many accounts blocked the last few days. Bad things can happen to bad people without frothing at the mouth and going full bloodlust, but so many people here seem incapable of that.
I get it, the victim could not be any more unsympathetic. But the responses here are beyond sickening. Thank you for being level headed; I appreciate you.
Yeah, it’s like they wanted to include that stat but also kind of gloss over it to not “all people are stressed” the article. I can see why they did, but yeah, lol.
LOL. Every word of that bit is so true.
Oh, that’s handy.
With present tech, I don’t think so unless the area where you’re being tracked is full of equipment that can read the tags (think big RFID readers like you see on the exits of stores). Unless the tracker implant is fairly large to be able to contain/harvest power to power their own active transmitter. Then it would probably be noticeable or at least uncomfortable.
I’m basing this on the fact that we chip pets with passive tags, and those don’t seem to suffer any kind of rejection/infection.
Short answer: Yes
Long Answer: Good lord. Yes, it would be something a bad person would do.
In effect, any gains you make will be blood money. Have fun with that on your conscience.
I always do some level of RAID. If for no other reason, I’m not out of commission if a disk fails. When you’re working with multi TB, restoring from a backup can take a while. If rapid recovery from a disk failure is not a high priority for you, then you could probably do without RAID.
Either way, make sure you test your backups occasionally.
Another way to put it: With RAID, a disk failure is like your Check Engine light coming on. You can still drive, but you should address the problem as soon as you can. Without RAID, it’s like your engine has seized up and you have to tow it for repair and are without your car until it’s fixed.
Thanks for the additional insight.
A coffee maker, I’d just return. But a dishwasher, refrigerator, oven, etc would be a huge hassle I’d want to avoid. I think my best bet, like you said, is to just look for one that has absolutely no mention of w-fi or “smart”.
I like Joplin. Works offline and syncs with my Nextcloud.
That’s a big, honking “no” from me.
It’d be one thing if the “smart” features were there but only supplemented the basic functionality. It’s another entirely for those basic features to require an internet connection.
Out of curiosity, did the product description indicate the internet connection was required? I’m soon to be replacing some appliances and want to know what to look out for (besides all mentions of “wifi” or “smart”).
When the mods are clearly exasperated and the reasons get spicy, I like to call it the “mood log”.
Looks like several rule 4 violations (post title must match the article) combined with posting a questionable source (Daily Mail, blech) got a 1 day ban.
Takeaway should be making sure you follow the rules and don’t editorialize the headlines.
For the record, I’m all for the right to medically and painlessly end one’s own life if they so choose. That said…
It could potentially be abused in situations where someone has power of attorney or some other situation where they can make medical decisions on your behalf. That seems like a pretty easy thing to guard against, though.
What’s the benefit of rspamd over SA? I’ve used SA since I first setup my mail stack years ago, and it’s been great. Cron jobs run nightly to train based on the contents of all the mailboxes’ .spam
folders, so it’s only gotten better with time.
Not judging, just curious.
If you want it as an app, you can “install” it as a PWA in Chromium-based browsers or use Web App Manager from Linux Mint to wrap it with Firefox (which sadly doesn’t do PWAs on desktop)
That’s okay, too.
For me, I only let people I know use them (friends and family) with the exception of my Lemmy instance, of course (and even that’s not wide open to the world).
I’d be running these for myself whether anyone else used them or not. Unless I’m hosting for hundreds of people, the cost to run these services is the same as it is just for myself. Granted, I don’t have people gaming the system trying to backup their entire PCs to their email inbox or Nextcloud, but that’s where the trust factor (and storage quotas) comes in.
As far as being responsible for all that goes, again, the small audience of people I know personally lets me explain that it’s all “best effort”. That said, I do take my own backups and high availability seriously and they benefit from that.
Most containers default to UTC, and depending what you’re running, that may be fine.
I only mount
/etc/timezone
//etc/localtime
if I’m running a container where it needs to be on the same timezone as the host (DB containers, anything where I want the logs in local time, etc). Not all containers use theTZ
env var, so bind mounting the timezone files from the host is a guaranteed way to sync them.