In reply to: https://toast.ooo/post/12315941
Alt-double-click to open Properties on a file is straight out of Windows. It’s something I really missed!
Alt-double-click to open Properties on a file is straight out of Windows. It’s something I really missed!
Alt-double-click to open Properties on a file is straight out of Windows
I learned a fun new thing today.
OCR for screenshots sounds super cool :0
Exactly. I’ve got a 4TB mirror setup for my pictures I reclaimed from Google Photos, and music, and other important stuff. It also backs up to iDrive which is really affordable. (Hopefully stays that way…)
What sucks is I scored a deal on a pair of WD Red 4TBs to add, but one was defective, so now I’m stuck with a half mirror I don’t know what to do with and it’s kinda not responsible for me to spend >100 bucks completing the mirror right now.
My media collection isn’t on a mirror or backed up or anything because it’s naturally way larger than everything else, but I think for the stuff that truly matters, this will see us through.
If any service has only username and password instead of mfa or password less then it’s not safe.
None of them do
You also didn’t mention if you have automated patching or immutable backups enabled.
I do not. I don’t even know what those are tbh
I do the same. It is not perfect for it but it works and it is already running. I’m not sure I would recommend it for anyone not looking for audiobooks
I tried Calibre web and Kogma.
Calibre is just bad software at this point, it’s clunky and not really designed as a server.
Kogma was fine, but a web only interface made it hit or miss. The big selling point for me with audio bookshelf was the ability to download local copies.
Thx! We coulf call it an ebook library then and not a reader.
As always, this is incredible engineering. I’m so excited that M series macs have a supportability path beyond Apple’s proprietary support
Certainly whoever wrote that didn’t do a lot of distro-hopping. As far as I can tell, Gentoo still includes sys-apps/net-tools in the @system set, meaning that it’s not only installed by default, but it’s quite difficult to remove.
I suspect at least some my butt was used in the creation of the article, since it feels like exactly the kind of hallucination an my butt would make after fixating on some incorrect upvoted post from some ignorant forum-user, but honestly the flood of incorrect slop is so common nowadays it doesn’t even feel worth pitchforking or pointing out anymore. I just fact-check and move on with my life.
Could you also have a row for english?
The SSDs are definitely weirder than they are spinny but otherwise it depends. A 7200RPM weird spinny thing is for example more spinny than a 5400RPM but if you take 3 of the 5400RPM in a RAID, then the spinnines is aggregated, making it more spinny than a 7200RPM. But in doing so, you are multiplying the weirdiness, making it exponentially more weird than a single 7200RPM weird spinny thing. This has to do with how the weirdiness particles flow between the spinny things to make sure that you’ll always be able to recover the weirdiness of one of the spinny things from the other spinny things in case of an untimely demise.
This is definitely food for thought. Junk food, but technically food.
Two random things you may already know, but just in case:
3.60 €/month is not bad. however i’d look for something even cheaper, given that the lowest plan gives 4 cores and 8gb of RAM, which I probably won’t need
Oracle (yes, the evil company) gives you one VPS for free
I hate that it’s oracle…
Asahi Linux developers have published a status report following the recent Linux 6.19 kernel release to outline recent progress and upcoming items around Apple Silicon support on Linux. This year will also mark five years that Asahi Linux has been around for bringing Linux to the Apple M-Series hardware.
Their latest progress report began by commenting that the DisplayPort Alt Mode support with USB-C – a very frequent question from users – will be “done when it’s done”. There still is a “fairy dust” branch with their downstream code in current form but not officially supported.
Drives have always been more expensive where I live due to taxes and extra “pirate taxes” they stick on anything you can store data on. But now they are even worse, so sad. $589 for 16TB Toshiba N300 was the cheapest “new” ones I could find at a glance.
Sadly the import taxes from the states would almost double it. I think I can find somewhat cheaper drives in Germany if I looked hard though.
Oh you’re outside the U.S. yeah that’s a pickle. Microcenter is a brick and mortar store here so I’d definitely recommend checking for your local equivalent.