It can be both, the device isn't transparent at all and the user can control how much of the real world they are seeing at any time. It's all cameras that create the AR effect. Applications can be anything from a floating window in the real world or a full VR immersion.
bdonvr
I just want a selfhostable Authy clone. Is that too much to ask?
If your family had a PC at that time absolutely. Just wait for the first inklings and start mining. It was way easier at the start. You'd be able to get several thousands pretty easy. Maybe you get some visa gift cards as a kid for Christmas, dump em in there. Or even just go to any store and use your allowance to buy one. Then sell at the peak. EZPZ
Not true, I've always used Authy.
Immich iirc has seen huge and rapid development in the past two years so no surprise.
I set up Immich a week or so back. It's been a dream so far. The object recognition is really way better than expected. The App works really well.
I used this script to import my Google Photos dump. https://github.com/simulot/immich-go
I can't say I used every possible feature of Google Photos but I haven't missed anything yet!
Disney+ has a lot of foreign language dubs, which even for mainstream titles are exceedingly hard to find on torrent sites. It's the thing holding me back from getting a NAS and going full pirate.
Not colorblind, she really is similar in color to the seat. The back of the seat can kinda make it look like she's spreading your legs if you're not looking right at the picture (for example, when reading the caption)
Most containers don't package DB servers, Precisely so you don't have to run 10 different database servers. You can have one Postgres container or whatever. And if it's a shitty container that DOES package the db, you can always make your own container.
that those images are configured according to your actual end-users needs, and not to some packager's conception of a "typical user": do you do mailing? A/V calling? collaborative document editing? … Your container probably includes (and runs) those things, and more, whether you want it or not
that those images are properly tuned for your hardware, by somehow betting on the packager to know in advance (and for every deployment) about your usable memory, storage layout, available cores/threads, baseline load and service prioritization
You can typically configure the software in a docker container just as much as you could if you installed it on your host OS.... what are you on about? They're not locked up little boxes. You can edit the config files, environment variables, whatever you want.
Nothing to do with efficiency, more because the containers are come with all dependencies at exactly the right version, tested together, in an environment configured by the container creator. It provides reproducibility. As long as you have the Docker daemon running fine on the host OS, you shouldn't have any issues running the container. (You'll still have to configure some things, of course)
I've setup Nextcloud but have done next to nothing with it.
My Lemmy instance gives me the most problems, but it's also the only publicly available service I run. Mostly the issue is it seems to have a memory leak that forces me to restart it every few days.
Everything else has been completely rock solid for me, running on a mini pc (formerly a pi4 until I wanted to start doing stuff with Jellyfin and needed more power for transcoding) on OpenSUSE Leap all in docker containers. Makes it insanely easy to move stuff. I had no issues basically just copying the docker-compose files and data and bringing them up even when switching architectures.
The pencil isn't a bad stylus for art, especially on the go.