Step 1: get a cat
Step 2: ???
Profit!
Step 1: get a cat
Step 2: ???
Profit!
I’d assume it’s got something to do with the system you’re using them on, some issue with power or something that better quality drives are able to handle, but not these.
These are cheap, yes, but if everyone ordering these was failing just outside the return period, they’d have far more 1 star ratings.
If you have regular backups, not an issue. I use bitwarden self hosted through home assistant, which makes daily backups trivial.
There’s a forum I think, discord seems to be, as it clearly says, for real-time support and discussion.
I despise Discord as an alternative to a proper support forum, but having both options like this is great.
In what world is this is a resource monster??
.com domains recently got more expensive. Almost double in price compared to CloudFlare (who sell domains at cost).
There’s a project called Tabby that your can host as a server on a machine that has a GPU, and has a VSCode extension that connects to the server.
The default model is called starcoder, and it’s the small version, 1B parameters. The downside is that it’s not super smart (but still an improvement over built in tools), but since it’s such a small model, I’m getting sub-second processing times.
And power, that’s a pretty important metric if you plan on running something 24/7.
Wow Change Detection seems like a much better alternative to curling a webpage and using grep to search for particular elements… :/
Bitwarden is kinda insane for the amount of features it offers. I recently found that you can create an organisation and add family members, and have it set up so that you can reset their password if they’ve forgotten it, while still securely encrypting the passwords. This was a really cool feature that I didn’t know was even possible.
Does the n95 handle 4k to 4k Plex transcodes well? Or are you talking about 4k to 1080p?
You could say the same of Chrome, to be fair.
Idk but pricing in Australia is fucked. The fibre network isn’t that large to begin with afaik, and even if you do have fibre you have to pay an arm and a leg for good speeds.
E.g. I pay like $70 USD a month for 100/40.
Symmetric gigabit costs several hundred a month, they’re not intended for residential customers.
Idk about you but I thought this was the case as well, since the last time I used Inkscape was probably like 6 years ago, and at the time, the UI was super dated looking (don’t get me wrong, it was still functional).
The different is night and day now, I honestly couldn’t tell that it was the same software. UI looks super clean and modern.
Was going to buy one, and I’m certain the quality would have been worth it (just couldn’t justify spending >$50 at the time), so I bought something similar on eBay for like $10-$20. Has a ton of screw tips, some disassembly spudgers and picks, a suction cup, etc.
This already exists
But you can just do that with a normal VPN? What’s the advantage doing it like this?