Speak for yourself
Speak for yourself
Ok that’s just not true at all.
Core temps ramp up astonishingly fast on RPi!
ducks
How many times do I have to tell you? Jacking off on chicken eggs is not going to create a human/rooster hybrid.
Now pull your pants up and get off my farm before I call the cops!
You should know that not all clients display your display name, some only show your username@instance.
It’s not apparent to everyone that your name is Onno.
There is no original thought.
A friend of mine had some explaining to do when he screwed up a dhcp config change and started routing his guest wifi through his “personal” pihole instead of the restricted guest one (he had family/children over often and did not want to be the reason nephew Timmy got an eyeful of wet bush or a beheading).
His family-friendly pihole was at holypi.lastname.local
and his private one was creampi.lastname.local
But only when it’s a hot topic.
You can make helmets very easily using a vac table and a 3d printed bust that’s the same size as your head
I’m definitely going to try this. All this time I’ve just been sticking my head in the vac table.
You can get plenty of protein from cheese if you’re alright with having a dysfunctional digestive tract.
The other poster said it’s about convenience but that’s not really true. The claim to fame for NVMe drives is speed: While SATA SSDs can theoretically run at up to 500 MB/s, the latest NVMe drives can hit 7000+ MB/s.
It’s for this reason that you should pay attention to which NVMe drive you choose (if speed is what you’re after). SATA-based M.2 drives exist – and they run at SATA speeds – so if you see a cheap M.2 drive for sale it’s probably SATA and intended for bulk storage on laptops and SFF PCs without room for 2.5" drives. Double check the specs to be sure what you’re getting.
If you’re practicing 3-2-1 backups then you probably don’t need to bother with RAID.
I can hear the mechanical keyboards clacking; Hear me out: If you’re not committed to a regular backup strategy, RAID can be a good way to protect yourself against a sudden hard drive failure, at which point you can do an “oh shit” backup and reconsider your life choices. RAID does nothing else beyond that. If your data gets corrupted, the wrong bits will happily be synced to the mirror drives. If you get ransomwared, congratulations you now have two copies of your inaccessible encrypted data.
Skip the RAID and set up backups. It can be as simple as an external drive that you plug in once a week and run rsync, or you can pay for a service like backblaze that has a client to handle things, or you can set up a NAS that receives a nightly backup from your PC and then pushes a copy up to something like B2 or S3 glacier.
I don’t disagree, was just trying to shed light on the “don’t ask me why” part.
I dipped my toe into Solvespace for a couple of projects and it’s not bad. As with anything it takes some getting used to, and there are things that it does better than freecad (and vice versa).
This is not the same as the orange sheep “Partdesign_Clone” command found in the Part Design workbench. Don’t ask me why they use the same icon.
They’re the same icon because they’re both cloning operations — and I’m sure we’re all familiar with the story of Dolly the sheep, the first cloned animal.
They’re blue and orange because those are the freecad colors for sketch and part respectively.
The multi color is neat but that print quality… woof
and this is coming from someone who daily drives an ANET
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I know (hope) you’re being facetious, because the objectively best way to do email validation is to send a fuckin email to the provided address.
Most people set up a reverse proxy, yes, but it’s not strictly necessary. You could certainly change the port mapping to 8080:443
and expose the application port directly that way, but then you’d obviously have to jump through some extra hoops for certificates, etc.
Caddy is a great solution (and there’s even a container image for it 😉)
The great thing about containers is that you don’t have to understand the full scope of how they work in order to use them.
You can start with learning how to use docker-compose to get a set of applications running, and once you understand that (which is relatively easy) then go a layer deeper and learn how to customize a container, then how to build your own container from the ground up and/or containerize an application that doesn’t ship its own images.
But you don’t need to understand that stuff to make full use of them, just like you don’t need to understand how your distribution builds an rpm or deb package. You can stop whenever your curiosity runs out.
Did you know that HOLOGRAM is an anagram for GLAM HOOR?