Meh, I purged windows from my systems last month. I will never be forced to (re)install Edge, use the garbage search, or link my pc to a gd Microsoft account again. I've had enough of Microsofts bullshit.
Darkassassin07
After reading this thread and a few other similar ones, I tried out BorgBackup and have been massively impressed with it's efficiency.
Data that hasn't changed, is stored under a different location, or otherwise is identical to what's already stored in the backup repository (both in the backup currently being created and all historical backups) isn't replicated. Only the information required to link that existing data to its doppelgangers is stored.
The original set of data I've got being backed up is around 270gb: I currently have 13 backups of it. Raw; thats 3.78tb of data. After just compression using zlib; that's down to 1.56tb. But the incredible bit is after de-duplication (the part described in the above paragraph), the raw data stored on disk for all 13 of those backups: 67.9gb.
I can mount any one of those 13 backups to the filesystem, or just extract any of 3.78tb of files directly from that backup repository of just 67.9gb of data.
Linux?
I just use sshfs to mount ssh shares and move files between them like any other folder.
Same with samba shares (windows).
Bait.
Innocent people are easier to bomb when they're out scrambling for the food you've isolated them from.
How dare you bring logic and reason into this!
That is, if customers can find the hydrogen to power it.
That'd be my big concern; where tf would you re-fuel it?
There one single hydrogen fuel station in each of the two major cities near me.
They've known far longer than that....
When was the invention of the immobilizer again? Oh yeah: 1919 104 years ago. With keyless entry being 1981 43 years ago.
Yet theres still cars on the road, built long after those creations, that you can start with a usb cable... (and that's just for the physical shape, not any sort of data)
Configure ethernet with fixed IPs, and configure wifi to use your phone hotspot.
Then you can use one to troubleshoot the other as needed.
Then your normal setup would be wired between the pi+laptop, with the laptop connected to local wifi for internet.
True, the browser extension can be rather annoying. I tend to do any edits through either the android app, or the web page.
Interesting, that I was not aware of. I've never run into a scenario where I've had to add/edit while offline.
When using vaultwarden however, you can be offline as long as the client can still reach the server (ie they are within the same lan network or are the same machine). You'd still be fine to add/edit while your home wan is out for example, just not on the go.
Plus there's the no-internet package mentioned in that link, but it's limited to the desktop application.
Bitwarden is (primarily) a single db synced between devices via a server. A copy is kept locally on each device you sign into.
~~Changes made to an offline copy will sync to the server and your other devices once back online. (with the most recent change to each individual item being kept if there are multiple changes across several devices)~~ /edit: the local copy is for access to your passwords offline. Edits must be made with a connection to the server your account resides on, be that bitwardens or your own.
If you host your own sync server via vaultwarden, you can easily maintain multiple databases (called vaults) either with multiple accounts, or with a single account and the organizations feature. (options for creating vaults separate from your main one and sharing those vaults with multiple accounts) You can do this with regular bitwarden as well, but have to pay for the privilege.
Using vaultwarden also gives you all the paid features of bitwarden for free (as it's self-hosted instead of using public servers)
I've been incredibly happy with it after setting it up ~3 months ago. Worth looking into.
I haven't looked at any streaming service in at least 5 years.
Want to watch something > Open Ombi > Search title > click 'request' > (request is processed by the arr stack) 15-25min later receive notification 'request ready to watch' > Open emby from anywhere > stream request from my home pc.
Most of the time the media's already been acquired from previous requests from users, monitored imdb lists, friend recommendations randomly tossed in throughout the week, etc; and can just be streamed immediately.