I’ve heard of it, but I didn’t think it was financially viable for an individual to pay for though.
I’ve heard of it, but I didn’t think it was financially viable for an individual to pay for though.
Someone commented on another video that they saw the Ram Air Turbine extended. So they would’ve lost power, supporting your electrical fire theory. Also it seems extending the RAT disables some safeguards, that can cause the wheels to lock and catch fire.
The other video: https://youtu.be/EPiNC5JpEYs
For projects like this where they’re hooking into the compiled python binaries, you really want to match the version.
Like 3.11 and 3.12 were pretty much released a year apart, a lot can change implementation wise.
After reading their blog, it seems like it doesn’t support Python 3.12, and it looks like you’re using Python 3.12.
Also if you tap on the ‘kebab’ menu and press View Source
, you can copy the message.
My understanding is that most of that all lives in mesa, and the kernel driver basically just abstracts the hardware.
I swear Lemmy comments for YouTube had a feature that let you open it for any page, but it seems the GitHub and Firefox page been deleted.
Edit: Looks like I’ve still got a fork: https://github.com/Steve-Tech/Reddit-Comments-for-YouTube (it says Reddit, but works for Lemmy too)
There’s The Serial Port, It’s not really ‘home networks’, but he finds and sets up very early (~80-90s) ISP gear and explains how it works and the history of it. Similar to how Ben Eater uses an ‘old’ 6502 to explain stuff.
I’m pretty sure schools must already have lockdown alarms in Australia (and drills every few years), so it’s surprising that this isn’t already a thing in America, especially with its issues.
I have no idea how CoW interacts with NTFS
With btrfs you can disable COW for specific files, that might give you a little performance boost.
Maybe, but also I think I was looking at the raw ‘data bits’, not ‘binary’ data. It’s actually almost exactly 4GiB, even when dropping down to minimum error correction (1.7 GiB otherwise).
(1454942×2953)÷1024÷1024÷1024≈4.00
Edit: So if alphanumeric mode could store lowercase letters, base64 would’ve stored more.
For those wondering, when using the biggest QR code with the maximum error correction (10,208 bytes), 1,454,942 QR codes is slightly less than 14GiB, which should be more than enough for a Windows ISO.
My math: (1454942×10208)÷1024÷1024÷1024≈13.83
Edit: Damn another guy beat me to it, now I wonder how I’m so far off.
To their partners*. Which I believe are companies that help out with support or something.
Cloudflare tunnels uses a QUIC connection between the cloudflared
on the server and Cloudflare itself, which is encrypted similarly to HTTPS.
Whatever protocol cloudflared
uses to talk to your webserver locally is configurable through the Cloudflare access web UI (just change http to https). I’ve actually got it configured to use unix sockets, which lets me treat it differently in my nginx config.
Total Commander
I’ve started recommending Amaze, it’s free, open source, and easy to use.
Although I still use Solid Explorer for myself, but only because I’ve paid for it and know how it works.
Both have SMB support, since copying files to and from my server is pretty much my only need for a file manager.
I’m not a radio engineer, but my understanding is you’re just bouncing signals off the moon itself, there isn’t a device that echos the signal back or anything. There are mirrors on the moon to reflect lasers back though.
It’s only a mercury rectifier, totally safe (compared to the radioactive stuff) but looks really cool.
Just thought Kiwix seems like it’ll be handy here, it lets you download Wikipedia and some other websites, and they have an Android app to view them.
(They have a web version too, which I actually selfhost for if the world ends or something /s)
That’s a good point, but in that case I wouldn’t think Consent-O-Matic would be able to do much about it.
Title text too:
https://xkcd.com/670/