It’s a real Emacs hotkey that converts all Latex blocks in your file into preview copies of them. Emacs is weird like that.
It’s a real Emacs hotkey that converts all Latex blocks in your file into preview copies of them. Emacs is weird like that.
In terms of setup, Caddy is a lot simpler in syntax, but you will find more tutorials for Traefik and it has better integration with Docker. You can add labels to a container and Traefik uses that as config, whereas in Caddy, you need to set up both the container and the config file. If you want to drop a service, then it is easier in Traefik for this reason. But with decent Nix code, you can basically replicate this in Caddy. Once you set them up, they’re pretty much the same. I’ve seen some people saying Traefik is faster, but realistically, I don’t think it’s meaningful.
C-u C-u C-c C-x C-l my beloved
I will. So far, s2idle did work for me but it unfortunately is not the level of sleep I was looking for.
Just did it and s2idle works! Thank you.
I’ll try that. Thank you!
That’s the issue. The journal just… stops the moment it enters suspend. I now even have an alias for that specific purpose. No one seems to have this issue online.
Jul 05 20:58:59 main systemd[1]: session-4.scope: Unit now frozen-by-parent.
Jul 05 20:58:59 main systemd[1]: user-995.slice: Unit now frozen-by-parent.
Jul 05 20:58:59 main systemd[1]: user.slice: Unit now frozen.
Jul 05 20:58:59 main systemd[1]: user-1000.slice: Unit now frozen-by-parent.
Jul 05 20:58:59 main systemd-sleep[82780]: Successfully froze unit 'user.slice'.
Jul 05 20:58:59 main systemd-sleep[82780]: Performing sleep operation 'suspend'...
Jul 05 20:58:59 main kernel: PM: suspend entry (deep)
(END)
I appreciate your help though. Someday, I’ll get it fixed.
I’m almost certain it’s not hardware considering all three have NixOS and they all have the exact behaviour of shutting down immediately as soon as the LED lights up as if the power is abruptly removed (yay reproducible), but not knowing how I can fix this is really frustrating. There simply isn’t a good way to concisely describe the issue, so finding people with the same issue is really hard.
A program that covers all kinds of games is going to be challenging due to sheer variety there would be. You could build a specialised protocol for a specific genre of games, but I think at that point, it would make more sense to build your own game, and use Fediverse identity to identify the user.
If you’re talking about self-hosted game servers, those already exists (see Minecraft), but it depends on whether they allow it or not. Reversing is possible, yeah, but it would take stupid amount of effort without their cooperation.
Main challenge of federated in the sense that there are communications between servers as well as client and server is probably going to be latency. If I were building something like this, I would rather have a protocol that redirects you to the actual game server so that you have direct connection to it rather than having your home instance acting as a proxy to the remote instance. Your home server would simply tell the remote server that your account is legitimate. This would be one of those “cracked” Minecraft server except they rely on an external server for account verification.
Suspiciously nut-shaped training dataset:
($@ > /dev/null 2>&1 &)
Simple bash function that runs something fully detached even if its parent closes, and is not dependent on any software feature such as bash’s disown
alias sp='sudo systemctl stop'
alias sr='sudo systemctl restart'
alias ss='sudo systemctl status'
alias sup='systemctl --user stop'
alias sur='systemctl --user restart'
alias sus='systemctl --user status'
Bunch or systemctl related aliases
Same. There are some tracks and albums I don’t like, but I won’t delete them. Another reason to use smart playlist, I can just put them into “Not My Style” playlist and it’s magically gone from my main list.
Try Ampache! I host 75k files with it.
Item Count: 74939 | Duration: 5274:37:36
Well, I don’t actually play all of them in a straight line; it’s more of an archive. Still, my main playlist is few thousand songs long, which is created with smart playlists.
They’re available in Soulseek! Both Soulseek and Ampache share the same directory. I was thinking of creating a torrent, but I am still in the process of deduplicating them, so I decided against it.
Why do I see no mentions of Ampache here? From what I found, it was the only program except Navidrome to support nested smart playlist, and Ampache has the editor directly in the web interface.
Anyways, I host mine too! Over 2TB of music files on my server, and it runs pretty well.
The full story link is dead, and my guess is that it should be pointing here. The story is about how embedded contents that appear in DuckDuckGo enables Google to track the user. The study they have done is here. This is unfortunate as DuckDuckGo still relies on Google to deliver parts of its contents, but DuckDuckGo offers plainer search engine too. This has happened before, so I believe it.