hperrin 2d ago • 100%
Oh man, fuck Bryan Lunduke. He aged like milk.
hperrin 2d ago • 100%
If they didn’t announce it, I’d assume the studio audience had died.
hperrin 2d ago • 100%
Forget the check, landlords really want to receive emotional rent every month.
hperrin 2d ago • 100%
In other news, grass is green and birds have wings.
But seriously, I don’t know how the American spy agencies have failed so horribly.
hperrin 2d ago • 100%
Hey, can you pass me a cola coke soda pop fizzy?
hperrin 2d ago • 100%
That’s pretty much every war ever.
hperrin 3d ago • 100%
They’re called fruit flies because they gather around rotting fruit.
But there are also “true fruit flies” which do eat fruit.
hperrin 4d ago • 100%
Well one of the candidates is a felon.
hperrin 4d ago • 100%
That’s because he’s ridiculously unhealthy.
hperrin 4d ago • 100%
It looks like the second season covers the second half of the first book, so you’ve got a lot in store! Especially in the next seasons. Oh man, I’m so excited!
hperrin 4d ago • 100%
But the code that loads other code (launches an app, switches to it, etc) needs to be running on the same CPU, afaik.
hperrin 4d ago • 100%
The libraries would probably be easy. We’ve already got x86 and amd64 libraries on the same machine, but the kernel I imagine would be awful. Would two kernels have to run on the same machine? What about memory access? What about the scheduler? Would it really be more efficient than emulation? For every x86 instruction, there is either an equivalent instruction or an equivalent set of instructions for ARM.
hperrin 4d ago • 100%
That sounds like a nightmare to code for.
hperrin 5d ago • 100%
You mean Ben Shapiro was wrong?!
hperrin 5d ago • 100%
Yup.
hperrin 1w ago • 100%
You want a light that’s a light? Ridiculous.
hperrin 1w ago • 100%
Oh thank god. Minetest was the worst name, and the game is actually pretty cool. It definitely deserves a cool name, and Luanti sounds cool.
hperrin 1w ago • 100%
Knowing the footguns in your language is always useful. The more you know, the less you’ll shoot your foot.
hperrin 1w ago • 100%
Can I suggest QuickDAV as a good file sharing/transfer app?
It uses the Nephele WebDAV server.
My dad uses Google Maps, and he mentioned that it seems to be getting worse. Like, giving him directions that are obviously worse than alternatives. Has anyone else here experienced this?
And don’t tell me this doesn’t work, it’s how I’ve run my house for the past ten years.
Does he realize anyone can make them? Like, for example, an image of him crying on his way to court while protesters throw cheese at him.
I need some help remembering a song. I only have bits of lyrics. It’s sung by a girl with a French accent. The parts I can remember are more spoken than sung. Talking about a cafe she says “the one you like on your street”. Another line is “after we would head to the cinema”. The song is directed at an ex she considers “stolen” from her and talking about dating and what could have been between them.
https://hub.docker.com/r/sciactive/nephele In the latest version of Nephele, you can now create a WebDAV server that deduplicates files that you add to it. I created this feature because every night at midnight, my Minecraft world that my friends and I play on gets backed up. Our world has grown to about 5 GB, but every night, the same files get backed up over and over. It's a waste of space to store the same files again and again, but I want the ability to roll back our world to any day in the past. So with this new feature of Nephele, I can upload the Minecraft backup and only the files that have changed will take up additional space. It's like having infinite incremental backups that never need a full backup after the first time, and can be accessed instantly. Nephele will only delete a file from the file storage once all copies that share the same file contents have been deleted, so unlike with most incremental backup solutions, you can delete previous backups easily and regain space. Edit: So, I think my post is causing some confusion. I should make it clear that my use case is specific for me. This is a general purpose deduplicating file server. It will take any files you give it and deduplicate them in its storage. It's not a backup system, and it's not a versioning system. My use case is only one of many you can use a deduplicating file server for.
I talk about my beliefs about what happens during the process of death, and how that can provide comfort as an atheist.
Does anyone have any recommendations for bug trackers with a forum feature? Basically something where users can report issues, request features, and ask questions, all about a specific service. Preferably, I’d like something that integrates with GitHub issues, but that’s not a requirement. Also I’d like something like a public roadmap or project tracker.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/12284817 > There's a new version of [Nephele WebDAV server](https://github.com/sciactive/nephele) (also on [Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/r/sciactive/nephele)) that supports using an S3 compatible server as storage and encrypting filenames and file contents. > > This essentially means you can build your own cloud storage server leveraging something like Backblaze B2 for $6/TB/month, and that data is kept private through encryption. That's cheaper than Google Drive, _and_ no one can snoop on your files.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/12284817 > There's a new version of [Nephele WebDAV server](https://github.com/sciactive/nephele) (also on [Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/r/sciactive/nephele)) that supports using an S3 compatible server as storage and encrypting filenames and file contents. > > This essentially means you can build your own cloud storage server leveraging something like Backblaze B2 for $6/TB/month, and that data is kept private through encryption. That's cheaper than Google Drive, _and_ no one can snoop on your files.
There's a new version of [Nephele WebDAV server](https://github.com/sciactive/nephele) (also on [Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/r/sciactive/nephele)) that supports using an S3 compatible server as storage and encrypting filenames and file contents. This essentially means you can build your own cloud storage server leveraging something like Backblaze B2 for $6/TB/month, and that data is kept private through encryption. That's cheaper than Google Drive, _and_ no one can snoop on your files.
At this point, I’ve got a lot of containers already running on my system, all in separate directories in my home directory. They’re each set up with a docker-compose file, and all of the volumes are just directories within those directories. I don’t really want to change this setup, because it allows me to easily rip it all out and transplant it to a new system. What I’d like is a web UI to see all of these containers, view their status, and potentially reboot them. It would also be great to be able to spin up VMs (not containers, but actual VMs) with it. I’ve heard of Portainer, but haven’t had any experience with it. What are your suggestions, and why do you recommend them?
You all remember just a few weeks ago when Sony ripped away a bunch of movies and TV shows people “owned”? This ad is on Amazon. You can’t “own” it on Prime. You can just access it until they lose the license. How can they get away with lying like this?
After a lot of work (cause I’m new to it), I published my **first Docker image**! Nephele is an open source WebDAV server written by yours truly. I’ve been using it for about a year now on my own home server. It basically acts as my self hosted cloud storage and all of my PCs and my family’s PCs back up to it. It’s FOSS, so use it for your own project. :)