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Fatal shooting of University of South Carolina student who tried to enter wrong home 'justifiable,' police say
  • Donofrio broke a glass window on the front door "and reached inside to manipulate the doorknob,"

    How much more "immediate" do you need? A complete stranger is trying to break into your home to do god knows what is the epitome of a clear and immediate danger to me.

    What would you have done? Opened the door and welcomed them in?

  • I has come to my attention that some users have never heard of F-droid. F-droid is a free software app store for android
  • Fdroid is a secure repositorie and the applications are reviewed before being made available for end users.

    Reviewed by who though? Malicious apps even get through apple and Google's screening. I can't see how fdroid can match the capabilities of those guys.

  • RaspberryPi NAS problems be like
  • Honestly something that critical probably shouldn't run on a rpi. There are plenty of cheap used thin clients you can buy on eBay that have better performance and reliability. I probably like the thinkcentre micros, but feel and hp have good options too

  • Java
  • I agree with all that. But I'm talking about exact integer values as mentioned in the parent.

    I just think this has to be true: count(exact integers that can be represented by a N bit floating point variable) < count(exact integers that can be represented by an N bit int type variable)

  • Java
  • I don't think that's possible. Representing more exact ints means representing larger ints and vice versa. I'm ignoring signed vs. unsigned here as in theory both the double and int/long can be signed or unsigned.

    Edit: ok, I take this back. I guess you can represent larger values as long as you are ok that they will be estimates. Ie, double of N (for some very large N) will equal double of N + 1.

  • Java
  • No, I get that. I'm sure the programming language design people know what they are doing. I just can't grasp how a double (which has to use at least 1 bit to represent whether or not there is a fractional component) can possibly store more exact integer vales than an integer type of the same length (same number of bits).

    It just seems to violate some law of information theory to my novice mind.

  • Java
  • How does that work? Is it just because double uses more bits? I'd imagine for the same number of bits, you can store more ints than doubles (assuming you want the ints to be exact values).

  • how do you use tailscale/zerotier?

    I have all my services running locally on a 192.168.10.x subdomain. Many are docker containers but some (like gitlab) are proxmox vms. Everything is behind a reverse proxy so I can access services through a url like paperless.mydomaon.com. the reverse proxy automatically pulls certs as needed.

    This is great for accessing stuff when I'm home.

    I'm trying to set up something for remote access. I don't want to use cloudflare as I just want access for myself from my phone and laptop. So I'm leaning towards tailscale or similar.

    But do I need to move all my services to use the tailscale subnet? Seems like a pain and also requires installing tailscale on everything (even on docker containers?). Or do I just install tailscale on the reverse proxy since it can reach everything else. But then I wouldn't be able to ssh into a proxmox vm remotely unless I installed tailscale on the vm?

    Or is this what the tailscale subnet router is for?

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    San Antonio Spurs @lemm.ee karlthemailman @sh.itjust.works
    Spurs acquire Reggie Bullock from Mavericks
    www.poundingtherock.com Spurs acquire Reggie Bullock from Mavericks

    San Antonio picks up another veteran wing in 3-team sign and trade

    Spurs acquire Reggie Bullock from Mavericks

    Spurs are acquiring Reggie Bullock and an unprotected 2030 pick swap from the Mavericks, in order to open up salary room for Dallas to acquire Grant Williams from the Celtics.

    0
    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)KA
    karlthemailman @sh.itjust.works
    Posts 2
    Comments 77