In that case Debian, Ubuntu, and Windows server should absolutely dwarf OSX…
That said, I personally wouldn’t consider “server use” to be “mainstream”… To me install-base does not equate to “mainstream”.
In that case Debian, Ubuntu, and Windows server should absolutely dwarf OSX…
That said, I personally wouldn’t consider “server use” to be “mainstream”… To me install-base does not equate to “mainstream”.
Shouldn’t Ubuntu be more “mainstream” than debian?


Thad looks like a crazy efficient way of downing drones… And a lot cheaper in the long run than kamikazee’ing into it…
Awesome development, and nice aiming.
Slava Ukraini
I recently bought a cheap 5th gen Intel NUC and installed Batocera on it. Now I actually get to play some of the Nintendo 64 and PlayStation 1 games that I never had the chance to play as a kid, due to never owning a console
All my docker images are in code in Github.
Renovate makes a PR when there are image or helm chart updates.
ArgoCD sees the PR merge and applies to Kubernetes.
For a few special cases I use ArgoCD-image-updater.
If you want something a bit more humourous:
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams
Guards! Guards! - Terry Pratchett


Well… Canada has a land border with Denmark…
Well, I would certainly agree, but by OPs own admission:
I suck at the typical handle building methods and materials
So if carving a handle isn’t within OPs skillset, but 3D printing is… Then CNCing some wood seems like an obvious solution.
If you want to be able to make a wooden handle, and with the previous expenditures in mind… It would seems that a CNC Router wouldn’t be entirely insane…
I have my Firefox configured to force HTTPS, so it’s rather inconvenient to work with any non-HTTPS sites.
Because of that I decided to make my own CA. But since I’m running in Kubernetes and using cert-manager for certs, this was really easy. Add a resource for a self-singed issuer, issue a CA cert, then create an issuer based on that CA cert. 3 Kubernetes resources total: https://cert-manager.io/docs/configuration/ca/ and finally import the CA cert on your various devices.
However this can also be done using LetsEncrypt, with the DNS01 challenge. That way you don’t need to expose anything to the Internet, and you don’t need to import a CA on all of your devices. Any cert you issue will however appear in certificate transparency logs. So if you don’t want anyone to know that you are running a Sonarr instance, you shouldn’t issue a certificate with that in it’s name. A way around that is a wildcard cert. Which you can then apply to all your subservices without exposing the individual service in logs. The wildcard will still be visible in the logs though…

PSU can indeed make a pretty big difference.
If you only have a 80 Plus certified PSU, and see 65 watts drawn at the wall, your system might actually only be using 52 watts, the remaining 13 watts are wasted as heat in your PSU. 80 Plus Gold, Platinum, or Titanium all carry higher efficiencies, but also cost more to buy.
Actual efficiency is also heavily influenced by the load. Most PSUs are most efficient at 50% load. Both lower and higher loads with result in worse efficiency.
Here’s an article with some more details: https://www.technewstoday.com/power-supply-efficiency/

https://minerva-archive.org/ is working on archiving all the data from Myrient. Unfortunately their main page is down right now. But they have a client that volunteers are running to coordinate the archival efforts. Last I heard they already had >80% of all the content archived


I’m just gonna leave this here: https://developer.valvesoftware.com/wiki/Valve_Time

Resilio wouldn’t work well for distribution…
But archive.org seems to handle torrents pretty well. When they have a bundle they add a torrent with the same content, and set up themselves as webseed… Then everyone can download either directly or through torrent, and choose to seed what they want. If the content changes, post a new torrent… Of course that means that any old seeders get invalidated… But if they care about seeding they could update the torrent and point it at the old download to avoid redownloading everything. But also, how often does this content actually change? If a game iso/rom is ripped/dumped correctly isn’t that data kind of final? Why would the bit-perfect data need to change?


The clause might be stronger, but there’s no EU forces, no EU equipment, no EU AWACS, and no EU command structure, to back up that clause. There’s many individual national militaries, but no dedicated EU military. NATO on the other hand has dedicated forces, equipment, command structure and so on. Logistics wins or loses wars. So even if the clause is stronger, is carries much less weight than NATO.
Being in the EU is however a decent deterrent for most purposes, but maybe not sufficient to deter Russia, China or USA.

Insulation works both ways… It keeps houses warm in the winter and cool in the summer.
Over the past month, I built an old 5th gen Intel NUC into an emulation station with Batocera, it now plays everything up to and including N64, dream cast and PSX games.
Then I bought a used Wii, threw homebrew and nintendont on it, so it now that handles game cube and wii games.
So many good old games I never had the chance to play growing up (never had any consoles)…
Gaming in the past is pretty damn awesome, especially when you can get just about any game you would want.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=VbJ4ilDvGyc