

At least this game may be worth it if it’s $/h.
Nintendos game might be <40hours long of pure campaign (excluding open world games like pokemon)
Usually a lurker.
Maybe I should’ve just shut up and thought for a bit longer before writing that comment…
If you want to talk to me elsewhere, you know how to reach me.
At least this game may be worth it if it’s $/h.
Nintendos game might be <40hours long of pure campaign (excluding open world games like pokemon)
I wrote a shell script like this (it admin , notna dev) for private use.
The prompt took me like 5 hours of rewriting the instructions.
Don’t even know yet if it works (lol)
I set mine up with Authelia 2FA and restricted media deletion to one user: The administrator.
All others arent allowed to delete. Not even me.
Veeam community edition is fine for most things.
If you are cheeky, generate yourself an NFR license on their website.
Edit: Veeam plans a Linux version for VBR 13.
Veeam Agent can run stand-alone on both Linux (only specific distros are actually supported. Non-supported might work) and Windows
Using Veeam.
It’s whole purpose is doing backups from small deployments up to the datacenter level.
Might be worth taking a look.
And the documentation is very good.
Seems like you never had a childhood when (proper) paper planes were common?
r/bitchIAmATrain and r/bitchIAmABus wanna argue (please link equivalent community)
Planes don’t fall just out of the sky. They’ll glide.
My life went down in Containment doing 1v1 splitscreem pvp with my friend.
I will never let anyone say Halo 2 was worse than any other entry.
It’s either Reach, CE or 2 (in the chronological order).
I mentioned one time pay.
If it’s that expensive, I can’t help you (or the devs) because I won’t play it then :-)
Not to mention: Snapshots.
Ain’t no way I’ll pay that.
I would have discussed if it meant a one time payment but hell nah.
My advice (if you can): Create a dedicated NAS VM and use samba the native way.
Or use a dedicated storage server with native samba.
Until they arent.
They are experts because they knew what clicking the wrong button might do.
E.g.: Database admins using the wrong script with a miscconfigured argument or a backup admin responding to a failover, tripple checking every setting to not create a problematic failover and then still clicking the wrong button causing an outage because some random behaviour caused an overload.
It happens. And best case you were better (double or tripple) safe than sorry.
IMO this attitude is problematic. It encourages people (especially newbies) to think they can’t trust anything, that software is by nature unreliable. I was one of those people once.
IMO: Exactly the reverse. That’s how we get clients clicking and agreeing to everything presented without for once thinking critically.
In 6 working years (MSP) I had probably less than 10 occurrences of clients questioning a security concept from their own action.
If we didnt protect them from their own stupidity, the amount of cyber breaches would explode…
Just recently:
A client: I clicked on the box that is asking me for domain credentials.
The client didnt say what type of window it was or what happened before/after.
The client juat contacted us, because the pc wouldnt connect to the network and thus was unusable… >_>
How about this:
Humans (or humans assisted by AI) write documentation
Users (devs included) can either choose to read the manual the old fashioned way or utilize it like a sort of swagger api documentation to give
Ah okay.
I assumed you were talking about the functionality and form (I have never seen slim versions of the UK plug as they exist at least in Germany)
What do you mean with flat? Like angled plugs?
And why is it important that their prongs are rounded?
Schuko are even more so. Miss me with those 3 prongs.
Got my sream deck. I am fine without a switch.
Nothing lost and if I’d need it, emulation works good enough.