

Depends on who has the better lawyer.


Depends on who has the better lawyer.

I’d like to say I’d stick to my principles here, but cases cost $10. Worst case I’m in a red state, wouldn’t be proud of it, but a bit of maga camo would make my life easier.

Kinda sucks because I am legitimately interested in a gold HTC phone.


From what I’ve read predicting solar flares is kinda like predicting the weather but way worse. AI is actually being positioned and tested as something to improve things, but it’s still pretty hard.
With that said though, with the resources of a large scale civilization controlling AI, could probably just skip worrying about predicting it and assume a solar flare was coming and prepare a backup plan.


This dude has paid some utility bills.


Feel like Goku has just done a grand tour to all the afterlifes at this point.


You’re not wrong, but I’ve never met a sikh who wasn’t basically the definition of accommodating.


There are already established workarounds for this.
There are kirpan (the knives) that are very short, intentionally blunted and even difficult to draw on top of all that. Those are a fairly standard option. Even calling it a knife at that point is almost a technicality.


The precious metals content realistically isn’t interesting at all unfortunately. You could make a bit reselling the internal components (like probably not even 3 digits), but the value on the actual copper/etc is negligible. The solar panel is probably the most interesting piece, but the components are cheap as fuck.


With older hardware, once you accumulate enough vram to run it, your problem is going to shift to memory bandwidth and your question is going to shift from ‘Can I run this Model’ to ‘Can I run this Model at an acceptable speed’.


The 64GB Framework Desktop runs just barely over 2k configured minimally, I went that route because I thought it was a better option than the discrete 32GB video card, but there are tradeoffs with compatibility. Something to think about at the 2k, but not quite 3k range though.
Man, no trying, it’s past and present tense now, doing and successfully did.


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Boiling water to spin a turbine, everything is Steam Power.
This feels like mostly an american thing, is pretty true here. They’ve fixed it in Canada and my time there was pretty limited, but in my experience fixed in Mexico too.


Not misunderstanding, just not the full picture. Proxmox can do VMs, but LXCs are different thing.
LXCs are a ‘container’ and have some requirements that might be frustrating sporadically, but they are much lighter. They’ll present like you’d expect from a VM (Their own operating system/shell/etc) but resources are mostly shared across LXCs on a host. Overhead isn’t gone, but drastically reduced. Personal experience obviously, but it’s never been something I’ve had to seriously consider on an LXC.


I know telling you that “You should have done this” isn’t helpful today, but super recommend Proxmox in the future. I have had containers running Plex, Jellyfin, and Emby all on the same physical host by utilizing LXCs. Migration could be rough, but overall it’s not as complicated as it sounds.


Jellyfin doesn’t really do anything better than Plex. If someone already does have a Plex pass, then the best you can say about Jellyfin is that you’re glad things are missing (Like Discover/Plex Channels/etc). Also, the level of support for Jellyfin just isn’t there. Plex doesn’t always have great support, but answers to technical problems in Jellyfin are frequently just “Don’t do that”. As others have mentioned too, the experience of sharing your library with isn’t really even comparable. Your chances of sharing your Jellyfin library with your grandma are near zero unless you just do it for her.
The process of setting up Jellyfin as a backup solution actually led me to experimenting with Emby. Unless something crazy happens to my current Plex implementation I’m still not going to proactively switch, but Emby legitimately does (rarely) have some features where it has a leg up on both of them.

Maybe just go all the way back to that first guy who noticed that the grain he dropped on the ground started growing again.
Just wake up, spend a few hours chasing a Deer until it collapses, take it back to camp with your buddies and hang out by the fire eating and making up stories about how crazy bears are for the rest of the day. Sure, dead by 40 at best, but doesn’t sound half bad.
It feels weird this was even ever a standard consumer feature. I wouldn’t even really expect it on enterprise hardware outside of servers. This feels like stuff you only really need to think about if you’re being directly targeted by a group with resources.