The PS2 one is pretty much the same, isn’t it? I’ve never used one of those myself though.
The PS2 one is pretty much the same, isn’t it? I’ve never used one of those myself though.
PS3 (that’s the Dualshock iirc?), Steam Controller, and the Wii U Pro Controller (I quite like the two analog sticks at the top). In that order probably.
That probably means it was silently cutting off the password until now. Cursed, reminds me of the original unix crypt() which I think did the same.
While users can see the toggle if they have installed the iOS 18 developer beta
Anyone know what toggle they are talking about? I’m not seeing anything in Messages settings nor Cellular settings. Or do they mean the toggle is US-exclusive?
edit: Ah, I found a screenshot. It’s supposed to be under the MMS messaging toggle in Messages settings but doesn’t show up for everyone yet (including me).
I’m not opposed to paying for online services in general, I’m just not going to pay them to make the site worse with every update. (Plus I kinda categorically refuse to give Google money at this point.)
I’m talking about the text in the “The problem with async” section in the article you linked in the OP.
Unless you specifically want ebuilds, take a look at nixpkgs dockerTools. It does everything you list here.
https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/stable/#sec-pkgs-dockerTools
Can we stop referring to the “what color is your function” post for languages it doesn’t apply for? Contrary to Javascript (where it does apply), Rust with tokio has adapters for both async -> sync (Runtime::spawn_blocking) and sync -> async (Runtime::block_on). It probably isn’t a good idea to overuse spawn_blocking but calling an async function from a sync one is literally no problem.
It was added in v256, maybe you don’t have that yet
The alternative is leaving them to get “special operationed” without any outside help, and then Poland or whoever Putin thinks he deserves to take land from is next, isn’t it?
I mean I give it a 100% chance if they are allowed to keep going like this considering the enormous energy and water consumption, essentially slave labor to classify data for training because it’s such a huge amount that it would never be financially viable to fairly pay people, and end result which is to fill the internet with garbage.
You really don’t need to be an insider to see that.
My backup service runs pg_dumpall, then borg create, then deletes the dump.
Another tip: take a look at systemd-networkd for managing your network connections! It has builtin support for creating wireguard tunnels and it’s very nice.
OSM data is generally on par or better than Google Maps data. The thing that’s lacking is the search engine.
Sorry I was hungry
This makes no sense to me, this effectively seems like a loan to me which is useful if you have a single large payment that you want to kind of spread the load on your account by turning it into a recurring payment over some amount of time, but groceries are a recurring payment already so what does this do other than make you pay interest on top? By the time you’ve paid off the first one you’ve probably bought groceries three more times.
The Nextcloud Windows client does VFS and there’s an experimental Mac client that does VFS.
If you can connect it to the SBC, yeah. This one comes with a PCIe card and you connect it with SAS cables (it unfortunately only does SATA for the drives though). The disks show up as separate independent devices and you can just combine them with mdraid or whatever.
There’s also a USB C variant of it but that seemed more sketchy to me.
I bought a QNAP TL-D800S disk shelf (it does have 8 slots and not 5) and an old used Fujitsu Esprimo on eBay. That means I can replace the PC with something more powerful in the future if I need to without having to worry about the disks. Works great so far with the 5 disks I have in it and the two stack on top of each other perfectly.
Why not just use RTF documents?