As the other commenter said, time shift will save you too. Snapper built into Tumbleweed is pretty good though as well as YasT.
As the other commenter said, time shift will save you too. Snapper built into Tumbleweed is pretty good though as well as YasT.
As an NVIDIA user, snapper has saved me multiple times.
Thank the gods for these Indian men. They’ve saved me countless times with their simple solutions to incredibly specific problems.
At what price point would this device be useful? Seems like the sort of device that was made to allow the company to be bought by Google/Microsoft/Meta.
Same probably. I’ve got a young child now so Factorio is not a responsible hobby to pick up again.
Haven’t tried streaming, but I have Chromecast devices set up with the jellyfin for android TV app to stream from the NAS over LAN to any TV in the house. Basically don’t have any subscription service so these things are just Jellyfin + YouTube devices.
Have got two of my family members onto bitwarden and even that is a lot for the tech-illiterate. Couldn’t imagine Keepass+syncthing.
Ultimately, bitwarden is better than using hunter12 for everything like how they were.
Obsidian user as well. I like to think of it that tags are folders.
When you put something in a folder, you have to choose one of the files identities. Tags more or less allow you to assign a file to any number of groups.
So if you’re writing about an NPC in a DnD campaign, for example: That NPC will exist in a certain place. He will be associated with particular guilds and he will have certain moves that you might want to keep track of. You can later easily search by a guild or a move or a place and there will be a link to that NPC and others that share those indentifying characteristics.
A big advantage of zettelkasten is that you don’t need to really worry about file management in the sense of needing to make exclusionary choices.
Zettelkasten users:
Hahaha, touché. To be fair though, a lot of people struggle with email.
And if an easier version of email existed, email mightn’t have caught on.
He’s more than capable of joining the fediverse, but he’s also a UI/UX designer. I would say his main issue with the fediverse is the amount of friction between a normie being exposed to the concept and actually signing up and engaging with it.
You have to admit that it isn’t the simplest thing to do. People have to understand the concept of the fediverse, find an instance that will accept them, sign up (with confirmation required from the instance mods) and then find out how to find communities that they are interested in.
It’s not about whether a tech-savvy person can figure it out with some effort, it’s about whether normal people can transition away from a monolithic, streamlined, social media to it.
Mountain bike riding with friends mainly. Also just bush walkkng/hiking.
Yeah sure, the *arr suite in general is a bit advanced to set up, even if it can be done in 30 minutes with experience.
Docker can be the install method for windows, and the whole suite of these apps. Probably the neatest way to go? Typically one installs this suite on a NAS that’s running 24/7.
Jellyseer, prowlarr, and bazarr can be added to that list.
Was that updating with “zypper dup”? I’ve heard going through discover or zypper update isn’t the recommended way strictly speaking, so its worth mentioning.
Opensuse tumbleweed. The packages go through a testing process unlike Fedora AFAIK.
Linux, but I keep windows on the other drive just in case I need a windows only app. Rarely happens except for VR.
100K per year if I can stop and lose that continued money at any time.