That's only after taking away all the toys they pulled out instead of doing anything to get ready for the last 30 minutes.
I really like my synology DS216j. Pretty much all I use it for is as a file server and storage, mostly because it can't really do much beyond that these days, but it sure does handle that like a champ. I'm not trying to run a business with multiple users on it, just me and the family, which means mostly just me and my projects. It was super easy to set up in my early days of home networking knowing that I wanted a central location for storing my files from different devices and holding my expanding media collection. I think I saw that it had been running for over a year (would have been several years, but we get power outages occasionally and it's not on a UPS) without a restart when I increased my storage, and it's been running without issue since 2017. I'm planning on upgrading to a device that has 4+ drives sometime soon to make expanding and redundancy easier to handle, but it's a hard sell when this one is still chugging along.
I think it helps that I've always had a raspberry pi or other computer do the tasky things, so I never got entrenched in trying to make it do anything other than be a dlna/upnp server for media and shared file jockey for everything else.
Tar lzma nuts, amirite?
My tip for the megaminx is that all the algorithms are the same as the 3x3x3, they just go off at weird angles. If you can keep your focus on a corner and treat it like a 3x3x3 you should be good. The last layer is odd to get the edges, I use the same algorithms, but the patterns to look for are different and the edges move a little differently since there's an extra edge that moves around. The corners are pretty easy in the middle portions, so I just put them in place while being careful about the completed parts.
I installed arch back in the day when I was at university. It was neat, but I had classes and needed to be able to get work done and use wifi, so I installed Ubuntu.
I suppose we should all buy some, then.
It's a hash, not anything encrypted.
You don't want a lot of people on a confined area with no water. I don't think it's about saving water as much as making sure there aren't 100s of kids in a building with no water.
I recall having a band like that, there were two or three removable sections closest to the watch on each side, those may have been removed already if they aren't there.
You'd probably get better conversations at selfhosted I know some folks there run *bsd network appliances. NASs, firewalls, etc.
The problem was treating her like she's not just hateful.
They gave her the choice to play the game and pretend she's not hateful, or just be hateful. She chose the latter.
It's always nice to know that I don't have any original thoughts.
Proof: this comment
What helps me is knowing what they are. The strings don't vibrate in a perfect single wave, the harmonics are already there. If you pluck an open string and briefly touch the string at the 12th fret (half a wavelength), you're dampening all the harmonics that DON'T have a node at that position, so the full wavelength and thirds are dampened but the 1/2, 1/4, 1/6, etc are left to ring out.
You just hold the pick in a way that your thumb follows and briefly touches against the string at the 1/2, 1/3, 1/6, etc. nodes. You pluck based on the length of the string from the bridge to the fret you're holding. So if you want to do the 1/3 wavelength, you "cut" the string into thirds and pluck at one of the two nodes such that your thumb "nicks" the string at that node.
A way I used to figure out where those nodes are based on the fret I'm fingering is to lightly rest my thumb on the string, and pluck with another finger (usually ring finger), moving up and down the string until I find one. The node is where your thumb was.
You don't need to pop it out to DD the SD card, you can do it while it's running. I like to pipe DD through gzip to get a compressed image as the output so I'm not sitting on 16gb file for 3gb worth of files.
Jokes on you, I'm supposed to be doing stuff.
I've had a basic DLNA server running for over 5 years and just set up jellyfin about a month ago and it's an absolute game changer. It has the functionality of a good streaming service except using your own media. It searches databases and matches it to your files so you get some really good images with the interface and information about the media. Plus it remembers what you've watched and how far you are into episodes and movies. Which is perfect if you have two or more TVs or devices you watch on.
It's changed my partners preferences on how they watch shows. They hated watching anything on my server because they have ADHD and it's impossible for them to figure out what they were watching and where they were in it, not to mention trying to navigate my lack of organizing anything. Jellyfin fixes that. Now I just plop a show into the shows folder, or a movie in the movie folder and it's dealt with.
In my experience the jellyfin app on my LG TV works phenomenally. The media app is absolutely horrendous, it takes several minutes to list media files every time a new folder is opened.
Jellyfin has been a game changer specifically in keeping track of what I've watched and how far into an episode or movie I am. Everything else is a bonus.
The article was written in 2015 stating he's been receiving pictures for 25 years.
I mean, in the sense of music history it is worth more than any other random one you can find on the street. But maybe somewhere around $500 - $1000 if it was signed by the band.