Check out Mealie
Check out Mealie
Crashing and burning (in a non-production environment) is an excellent motivator to develop necessary skills; being unafraid to break things and fix them when they inevitably break helps you get a deeper understanding of how the systems work, for what it’s worth.
Trying to get started with reverse engineering and binary exploitation by following this guy. My brain hurts, but in a good way!
I think this may more for acute vertigo, but have you tried the Epley maneuver?
Amazing work!
This appears to be a variation of the “standwich.” Please see the attached for an example.
I loved that book growing up and was so excited when the movie was coming out (on my birthday!)
To this day, that movie is the only one I legitimately walked out of. It was such a terrible adaptation.
Running an RKE cluster as VMs on my ceph+proxmox cluster. Using Rook and external ceph as my storage backend and loving it. I haven’t fully migrated all of my services, but thus far it’s working well enough for me!
Gorgeous cat…but where are the peppers 🤣
OSRS?
Good bot
I don’t know how I feel about this personally. On the one hand, I feel like this is a privacy win for those who want it: no watch history means no algorithmic recommendations and (presumably) less data collection for those users. On the other hand, I personally really enjoy the recommendations that YouTube makes for me. Maybe it is the wide variety of content that I watch, but I’m honestly very pleased with the recommendations that YouTube provides. That being said, I feel like the opt-in to algorithmic recommendations is a good thing overall, however I am personally going to leave my watch history enabled.
She turns into such a puddle on the couch
I want to try and create discussion about videos that may be less main stream. Video (specifically medium- to long-form) is my preferred type of content to consume, however I don’t have the ability to create my own content. [email protected] is great but as @[email protected] mentioned below:
Posts that invite comments tend to get comments.
[email protected] doesn’t directly ask for discussion on the videos posted. I created a community, [email protected], to try to bridge this gap. The idea is that you find an interesting video, you watch it, and then you post it with your main take-away or a question you had to try and foster a discussion.
Not sure if it is working, but that’s my own methodology to trying to increase engagement with content that I don’t personally produce.
Also, I am running a small self-hosted instance for friends, so my name may not be as “out there” as the larger instances, but I’m pretty sure that anyone can post to this community.
Back when COVID was in its prime, I was contributing CPU/GPU cycles to Folding@Home for protein folding simulations and working on a vaccine. Since then, I’ve reimaged my desktop twice. I should probably reinstall the BOINC client to contribute again…
Thanks for the info. That seems quite heavy handed.
I’m out of the loop, what is France trying to do with regard to DNS?
This video is a must watch for explaining the fundamental problems of crypto/NFTs.
Warning: it long, like feature movie long, but really informative.
Yeah, the whole article feels like it is both pandering and condescending at the same time. No thanks lol.
The Downtime Project is a pretty interesting podcast that covers some large outages and discusses their post-mortem analysises. Worth a listen IMO, very interesting stuff and some good lessons to learn.