adam

joined 2 years ago
[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 15 points 10 months ago

All votes are public, they're literally broadcast to the Fediverse writ large. You vote on something on your server, your server then tells the server owning the thing you voted on and that server then tells anyone who is interested (subscribers on other servers). That way everyone knows that this comment was voted on, but that information is indelibly tied to you - an entity on the Fediverse.

Lemmy devs just chose not to a) show that information in a UI (plenty of other software out there does) and b) not inform people that was the case. Which leads to the whole point of the thread, hiding this from users merely gives a false sense of security.

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 20 points 10 months ago

You say that, but you simply have to be using something that isn't Lemmy and that information is there (doubly so if you're an admin on any of these systems)

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 13 points 10 months ago (6 children)

Except, if you're using anything other than Lemmy at this point that information is already about. The Likes/Dislikes are considered public information by the protocol. Lemmy devs probably just didn't get around to building out the UI for that before the Reddit APIcolypse.

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 2 points 11 months ago

All your followers would see it and sometimes you don't want replies?

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 34 points 11 months ago

I work for the UK government. Everything my organisation does is licensed in either MIT or OGL (https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/)

Developing code in the open really helps ensure you nail down your secure coding practices.

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 20 points 11 months ago

blocked part of url because I have Kagi rewrite url to redirect to my private Redlib instance

I had no idea this was a thing. Thats going straight on my self-host todo list.

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 25 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

It's the multiple volumes that are throwing it.

You want to mount the drive at /media/HDD1:/media or something like that and configure Radarr to use /media/movies and /media/downloads as it's storage locations.

Hardlinks only work on the same volume, which technically they are, but the environment inside the container has no way of knowing that.

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 11 points 1 year ago (1 children)

allows it to make its tokamaks at only two percent of the volume of conventional tokamaks

Strap that into a tank, with - hear me out - legs, and we're golden.

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 21 points 1 year ago

This is a 2 and a half (almost) year old article. I figured Tim's thoughts on this were common knowledge at this point?

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I've not used dockge so it may be great but at least for this case portainer puts all the stack (docker-compose) files on disk. It's very easy to grab them if the app is unavailable.

I use a single Portainer service to manage 5 servers, 3 local and 2 VPS. I didn't have to relearn anything beyond my management tool of choice (compose, swarm, k8s etc)

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yes. On older generation/cheaper ANC this is perceived as increased "pressure". It doesn't seem louder but the physical sensation of loudness is there.

[–] adam@doomscroll.n8e.dev 57 points 1 year ago (5 children)

The sound produced by ANC is the exact 180 degree inverse (or as near as possible) of the incoming bad noise.

It's produced in realtime by dedicated signal processors and requires mic arrays feeding in the sound. The quicker your processing pipeline the better the match is and the more powerful the effect is.

There's no prerecorded sound that would work.

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