My condolences :'(
I once lost a bunch of data because I accidently left a / at the end of a path… rsync can be dangerous lol
My condolences :'(
I once lost a bunch of data because I accidently left a / at the end of a path… rsync can be dangerous lol
Unraid, mostly due to the flexible arrays.
which also includes their free services
Well… their free services remain free regardless of your registrar. Still, I don’t really mind supporting them given how useful they have been even in just the free tier.
like Google
Too soon. I mean, it was ages ago but…
Looks promising.
How would you feel about setting up automated pushes to docker?
There’s that as well. Point is, it really depends on the data.
I’m sure that really depends on the data.
If we’re talking about stuff like family photos, then having it retrievable feels pretty reasonable to me.
I’m using cloudflare as my DNS, and it’s literally just:
*
On the letsencrypt side, it’s pretty similar. Create a certificate with domain.name
and *.domain.name
(if you want them to share a cert) and you’re off.
I host some private stuff on mine, hidden behind an authentication service that is. But because I just use a wildcard no-one can really tell what I have hosted - the same login page occurs for every subdomain, regardless of whether it’s actually wired up to something.
That doesn’t help with services you wish to make semi-public (like a lemmy instance) though.
My mate’s home server.
I’ve never really understood why, seemingly universally, symmetric (or at least non-anemic upload plans) are completely unaffordable compared to “normal” plans (assuming they’re available at all).
It truly sucks for stuff like this.
I wonder how reddit users would respond to this sort of treatment. We’ve already sorta proven that most users are addicted enough that they’d get away with it.
Suppose I shouldn’t give anyone ideas though…
It’s a issue I have with most factory games, or even games like Minecraft. I really enjoy mid-late game. Early game is almost always a slog… an important and fun one the first time, but after the first time…
Did anyone else feel as… disengaged with the second one as I did? Something about it just didn’t grab me like the first one…
It’s not even a technical thing, like many have complained about. I never had those sorts of issues on my computer (once I turned off the steam desktop controller thing). It just didn’t keep my attention.
I’m not sure how good it’s going to be, considering the lack of discrete GPU… but that said, even onboard graphics would be plenty for many games, and certainly for streaming them from a more powerful computer.
RGB!!
More seriously, “gaming headphones” are almost always actually “gaming headsets”, ie they have a mic. Good music headphones without a mic don’t fulfil the requirements of quite a lot of gamers, and normal headsets are usually calibrated for voice and not immersiveness in games.
+1 for computercraft. It was super satisfying getting them to do even trivial things, but a huge reward when you pushed them beyond that.
Though I did find, in order to retain sanity, that I had to remote into the minecraft server and use an IDE rather than the somewhat awful experience of writing lua in game without any IDE tools.
I think one of the reasons people don’t understand that is because they’ve pulled the same trick multiple times with far less logical reasoning, so they’ve kinda done that to themselves.
But thanks for explaining it.
I really wish someone would teach these companies how to count.
My only guess is that they want to hide the insane amount of COD games there are.
Sometimes you’re hands are tied by the tools already on the server - but I’ll try to remember to check to see if that’s available next time.