Honestly, those are the most interesting builds to me. As an American, I’m waiting for tariffs to die before buying stuff of AliExpress, but one can hope.
They made it so server owners need a plex pass to stream to anyone outside the same LAN. Or the clients need to pay $2 a month if the server owner doesn’t have one
OnlyOffice local editors is probably the best drop in replacement for Microsoft office’s basic suite I have found. I’m a professional Linux user stuck in a company that depends on Microsoft products.
Doesn’t cover email, but is very good for everything else.
Can also edit PDF files, sort of. Doesn’t always format well on conversion from PDF to editable, but still workable in some cases
Aside from the fact that the best drivers are closed source, NVIDIA is killing it on Linux these days.
Source: me a professional Linux user and hobbyist Linux gamer.
Talk about double-fisting…
Aside from the tropes that were the major plot arc, I found Picard to be an enjoyable watch.
What else are people hating on it for?
I felt this revulsion in my bones. :shudder:
“Law and order” = “rules for thee and not for me”
Huh? Since when does handbrake not support GPU encoding? I know it usually supports the Nvidia encoding backend for mkv…
This is nearly copypasta worthy
Permanently Deleted
I’ve been running a personal server for years. Buy the lifetime pass now if you host a server. It’s so easy.
There’s also Jellyfin for those who despise spending money and prefer to control access in their own way.
Front-facing radar is the bare minimum needed to pass the test given (fake-road wall). Many vehicles use it for adaptive cruise control, and radar is even faster than either cameras or lidar for figuring out the range to an object. 1000 Hz measuring distance to an object is enough to find both the relative velocity and the acceleration of another object. This provides enough time to apply the brakes safely when approaching a vehicle or obstacle
LIDAR is even better, and also more compute intensive and expensive to install.
I think Tesla was very short-sighted in removing radar sensors, certainly. If they hadn’t, they could’ve spent more of their energy on making the FSD cars better instead of just making them sufficiently safe with insufficient sensors
That’s definitely part of it. Also not an expert, but I believe you have the gist of it. Diesel engines are more efficient for a couple of reasons, not the least of which is more efficient heat capture to use for Work.
Another factor would be that if you want to do an oil combustion into steam power, you have a few issues:
- You now have to lug around a LOT of both fuel and water, instead of just water and dry coal. Water and oil are both heavy by comparison to coal when lugging a train car of it around.
- you now have two areas for heat loss to happen. Steam engines require massive boilers, high heat, and run much greater worst case failure risks (I.e. explosions) which are at highest risk when the water runs out. Coal is worse for this than I imagine oil would be, though inertia is a powerful force. Why move to another complicated system that does the same thing when you can use the old one?
- Supply lines and training: if coal is already managed logistically, why switch to something else that provides a marginal benefit when coal is both cheap, easily accessed, and your engineers already know how to use it?
I’m sure there are even better reasons out there, but that’s what comes off the top of my head.
Something something .dev
Oh, for some reason I read them as LXC containers instead of as docker.
How did you put Immich in a container? I’ve struggled with that the last couple of weeks.
I find Waze has better real-time traffic info. Driving time estimates may vary a bit more, but I find it to be a more than adequate replacement for most tasks.
You do have to gut check some of its suggestions, though: it seems to think some roads are slower, even when they’re not as busy, and will route around them.
Yarr, matey.
They’re relatively cheap. I’ve had one for years, though I don’t use it for email forwarding.
Weird shit also happens if send mail isn’t coming from a big provider :(
This is exactly what I would suggest, with one addendum: use internet archive links wherever possible. Especially if the links are intended to be clickable.
In the process of acquiring an advanced degree, I learned the worst part of research is finding dead links to pages that were never archived.
By putting it in the internet archive to create a link, it also adds a snapshot.