If you haven’t had issues with Nobara (I never have), stick with it. It’s way more current, and Kubuntu has been a buggy mess on any hardware I’ve ever used it.
The CSIS is trying to keep an election clear of foreign interference. It’s literally the opposite of your shit-take.
OK, yah, that’s good point about swarms. I’ve generally not used any swarmed filesystem stuff where I needed persistence, just shared databases, so it hasn’t come up.
I guess my point was that if Canonical did it and nothing came of it, and Canonical isn’t poor, probably nothing’s going to come of it. Proxmox has been shipping ZFS for years, as well as the BSDs. Not a peep.
To be fair, that was more Augustus.
I think she was going for the ear twist.
If you don’t find a FOSS one, my wife and I have used OurGroceries for years and it’s a dead simple shared list app that can do more if you want, but it’s hidden behind the simple bit. I’ve been thinking I should build a selfhosted version myself because if it went offline, I’d be lost. I use it for quick lists if I’m working on something and need a bunch of stuff from the garage/toolbox, or a list of things I want to research later, etc, etc.
Well, I know you can define volumes for other filesystem drivers, but with bind mounts, you don’t need to define the bind mount as you do, you can just specify the path directly in the container volumes and it will bind mount it. I was just wondering if there was any actual benefit to defining the volume manually over the simple way.
Is there any advantage to bind mounting that way? I’ve only ever done it by specifying the path directly in the container, usually ./data:data
or some such. Never had a problem with it.
Oh Ubuntu even had an edition that defaulted to ZFS. The license violation ship has sailed.
S O C I A L M E D I A M A N I P U L A T I O N.
I’d say Maine’s governor is pretty much onside with that these days.
Yah, this would follow with Smith’s “put it off until PP is elected” fellatio outburst.
I don’t think a 36 day shutdown of that shit would hurt.
Not really, except the part when they decide to kill you.
Absolutely. Even if your ISP is firewalling, never trust they will maintain it, and some of these cheapshit routers they use are awful. Use your own router and put it on the ISP routers DMZ.
Those vacuums look pretty sweet.
A modern sensor would be a mass airflow sensor, but a sail switch that you can adjust the amount of surface area that it hits so it alerts if the amount of air isn’t high enough it doesn’t activate when the furnace is running.