• 4 Posts
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Joined 1Y ago
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Cake day: Jun 13, 2023

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This is all hard to do because it is hard to determine people’s race on lemmy. Some usernames give it away but most don’t. And I don’t go snooping trough their post history to find that out.


Giving them access to Jellyfin is not fully “copying” a movie, it is just access to streaming (they can download, but that’s on them).

Overall, this makes little sense anymore and I feel that limiting data sharing is hard to conceptualize, let alone prevent with regulation.


All responses are saying “it is illegal”. But is it more illegal than pirating a movie for yourself only? Would it still be illegal if you would have paid for the movie? In that case it seems like lending the dvd to a friend…


Can you expand on this wild claim? The whole point of containers is isolation so what you are saying is that containers fail at that all the time?


It started as actual unpublished technical descriptions of underlying technology.


If they made that, they could also make it so one can pay 10x more for each additional icon.

So 10e for one, 100e for two, 1000e for three and so on.

This would allow us to recognise all people seeking attention by flashing money very easily. Bonus points if we are able to filter feeds by number of icons.


I wouldn’t say that Linux & Gimp are objectively better, but they sure are better in the long run, since you plop “gimp” into a nix configuration and never have to deal with installation and cracking.


I use rathole for this purpose. Works great, minimal, great performance.


My house was built in 1939. Initial installation of ecectric cables consisted of a wire in a sleeve filled over with concrete. That was all replaced with proper tubing and isolation, but these few outlets do not have ground.


Wait what? What does that even mean? Is he their boss? Is he paying them? Does he mind control them?


I didn’t even notice the new actors, a testimony to how good they are!


Electricians of fediverse, should I have my selfhosting box grounded?
I know that the answer is yes, I should, but outlets near the setup are not grounded (even though they look like they are) and I don't want to have wires running though my living room. The real question is what are potential problems ? Occasional system reboots? Permanent damage to PSU? Permanent damage to other components?
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I use planka, which feels exactly like what trello used to feel: fast & simple. It does not have an app though.


I’ve opened up the pricing page, and it seems it is much more expensive then their mainstream competitor Backblaze. For a terabyte of backup for a month, rsync.net would charge 1024*0.012 = 12$, while Backblaze would charge 6$. Hetzner Storage Box would be only 3.20$ (+better price scaling over terabytes).

What am I missing?

Sources:


Ok, so most of you also use normal PC processors for your setups. So my power usage is not that high in comparison.

But still, a RaspberryPI would use much less and would still be performant enough.



Lemmings, what’s your self hosted server power usage?
I'll just come out and say it: 50W. I know, I know an order of magnitude above what's actually needed to host websites, media center and image gallery. But it is a computer I had on-hand and which would be turned on a quarter of the day anyway. And these 50W also warm my home, although this is less efficient than the heat pump, of course. What's your usage? What do you host?
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In my experience, the most readable response format are replys on some link aggregator (lemmy, hn, …) and a link to that thread in the original post.


After reading stories like this, I more and more convinced that if we want to have a free market, we need to limit the size of companies allowed to participate in it. Because if you have 2 companies controlling the whole market, they can and will produce “dynamic security”-type of garbage.




Woah, the landing page looks like some unfinished Wordpress template and the forge itself looks 15years old. Nothing wrong, with the former, I just don’t like the style.


You, my friend, should try EdgeDB. A database and an ORM in one.

When you change the data model, you can get to 100%, which you say is impossible for ORMs


Barges into a lemmy thread

Gives a strong, but quite abstract opinion criticizing abstractions

Refuses to elaborate further


I have a convention to correlate the size of variable scope with its name length.

If a variable is used all over the program, it will be named “response”. If it is <15 lines, then it can be “res”. If it is less than 3 lines, it can be only “r”.

This makes reading code a bit simpler, because it makes unimportant, local vars short and unnoticeable.



No biggie, it a nice entry barrier to have, because nowadays, there just too much new frameworks and languages and crypto currencies.


Because when you divide by zero and get a runtime error, the error will point you to location in SQL, not PRQL.

It’s like if an error in a C++ program would point you to an offset in a binary and not the location in the source. This has a slight tone of sarcasm, because that’s how compiled languages used to work. But after the years, they patched all leaks of their abstraction and now you are dealing just with the new language.


As a developer of the compiler from prql to sql, I can say that I’m working on a new language because I know SQL quite in-depth.

It seems ok on surface, but there are many inconsistenties that you either learn to live with or don’t even know are there until they trip you.


Cool. Any idea how would i use this with rustc?


What’s up with the cartoon characters on this blog?

I’ve seen a few posts and they are generally of decent quality and technical contents, but I’m a bit weirded out by the children’s illustrations.



I agree on basically all points. Great article, nicely explained.