

Thanks writing it all out instead of making us watch the video.
Thanks writing it all out instead of making us watch the video.
I understood this a a vibe coder trying python, the vibe-coding-way.
I meant more figuratively. Finally managed to move my compose files to nix files thanks to compose2nix. One thing that throw me for a loop was that podman (or perhaps nix) creates a service named <backend>-<service>. Compose2nix handles this accordingly but I had a few hours of head scratching until I figured that out.
That was an interesting and enlightening read. Thanks!
From all the hate you see, it does look like that. It is not?
I mean keep using port 22 on the server and redirect whatever port you want in your firewall (your router unless you have a dedicted fw) to port 22. Don’t change the ssh port on the server at all.
Why change the SSH port of a home server, which most likely is not reachable from the outside anyway?
And if it is, why change it on the server and not in the fw?
I installed a new server at home and went with NixOS. It looks super cool but it takes so much time to learn everything. The only thing keeping me from going back to Debian is how easy it was to permanently mount drives (and save a configuration for any future install or mishaps).
(I.e. mount, nixos-generate-config
, nixos-rebuild switch
and done!)
Swanstation
Thanks! Found their repo: https://github.com/libretro/swanstation
What’s the new one called?
Probably installed as a unit, computer with monitor. Perhaps a modifed version of a Linux OS?
This is stupid. “This is the only body you get” is a good point. The point is to think twice, not to not do it.
Didn’t Microsoft say not too long ago not to worry, because they didn’t have to give access to data?
I’ve been eyeing Matrix, never gotten around to use it. What’s the deal here?
This assumes it can be produced domestic, and if it can, at the same price. Labour cost and all.
From the readme:
RomM (ROM Manager) allows you to scan, enrich, browse and play your game collection with a clean and responsive interface. With support for multiple platforms, various naming schemes, and custom tags, RomM is a must-have for anyone who plays on emulators.
That’s the best way I’ve ever seen someone say they don’t use a unit of measurement.
Go to a concert.
I don’t get it, what should the link convey?
That was implied, this is 196 after all. :-)