• 0 Posts
  • 18 Comments
Joined 1Y ago
cake
Cake day: Jun 21, 2023

help-circle
rss

It’s usually considered a poor idea to use it also as an AP.

The location usually isn’t great for your WiFi and there are better tools for the job.



Ctrl+Shift+V exists now which does the exact same thing.

Actually it’s a bit better. Excel always ignores alt codes for the first key press or two after switching windows.


https://pcpartpicker.com/list/JhPvZJ

I didn’t even bother getting the best price. I just selected things that would work well.

Get an LSI HBA in IT Mode for another $60 to add another 8 drives.

The case was chosen because it can support 11 drives. It comes with six bays by default but you can buy packs of two bays for $15.

As is, this will cost ~$560 plus the drives and allow you to use eleven 3.5", but cheaper and better options for the PSU, mobo, SSD and memory are out there. I just selected things that would be useful for what you need and provide better hardware than a Synology.

If you don’t need as much storage, you can shave off $160 with a cheaper case and skip the HBA.


Yep, Hank would have traveled to a library and rented the disc, watched one episode, and returned it immediately. Then he’d repeat the process each time he wanted to watch an episode.


Usenet doesn’t guarantee any time at all. Content is purged regularly if it’s not being downloaded.


Usenet is worth it. More selection, no hoping that someone is out there seeding, and the quality is almost always much better.


On the flip side, there is VBA which practically enforces bad practices.


That makes sense, I mean your monitor can only fit like six lines of text.


Well I can see which one you’d be in the meme.


A few years back they dropped some clients (including the one for my old TV) because they were dropping support for legacy SSL ciphers on their servers

TLS 1.0/1.1? Those were deprecated and dropped by the IETF with RFC 8996. You can’t even get a certificate using 1.0/1.1 anymore unless you are self-signing.

You can also allow unauthenticated users on certain networks, usually limited to your local nets. But I do agree that doesn’t solve the problem. I’d love to allow users to optionally use local authentication with, eg, Authelia, something built in, or an LDAP backend.


I installed Jellyfin on my server but the Android TV app is just so awful.

It honestly feels like a webpage from 2005 with all the blocky elements, terrible scrolling, and no way to sort.

If you want to go to, say, Workaholics, you have to scroll through your entire library until you get there. There’s no option to go straight to W. And, don’t worry, the scrolling is very slow the whole time!

The search seems to work maybe 10% of the time. I’ve typed in the name of a movie and it wouldn’t find it, but it did find episodes of shows that kinda match. I’ve typed in names of TV shows and it’s found nothing. Both times, the movies and shows existed in my library.

If they can make it look and work better, I’d be happy to switch to it fully. All I’d need then is a way to pull the XMLTV file from Plex so I can record, too.

The Plex app for the Shield has a lot of bugs itself, though. I connected my Shield to a smart plug because it froze the system often enough that I needed to automate a way to restart it. Unfortunately I’d rather put up with that than the Jellyfin UI.


Yep, it’s supposed to mean C++++.

The sharp symbol also resembles a ligature of four “+” symbols (in a two-by-two grid), further implying that the language is an increment of C++.

That’s specific enough that I have to assume you already knew that, though.


By law passenger rail does get priority.

It’s just that the fee is so small that it’s worth giving priority to freight.


They make it super easy to turn off catching and DNS proxy if you’re worried about that, too. And they at least make their goals clear.

They don’t provide free services out of the goodness of their hearts, but because some users will go back to their company and convince them to get their paid services.

It’s the same reason a lot of software is free for college students and educators.


The benefit of Wireguard is that if you screw it up, it just won’t work. It basically enforces security.

Well, unless you tried to use the original PFSense module.


It’s a great little machine. The downside, though, is that it’s not that powerful at all. With hardware offload enabled and features like QoS turned off, you’ll get about ~600mbps of max total bandwidth shared between up/down.

For most people that shouldn’t be an issue, though.


You could also use OpnSense and install AdGuard Home on that.