

That’s why you install it on someone else’s pc :)
Sorry for scaring developers
Norwegian proot with a taste for shitposting
Deeply sorry for my photoshop creations
Former account at Kbin
aspe:keyoxide.org:JYRRSWIKLZWX366Y4DONCIEYAE
That’s why you install it on someone else’s pc :)
I still get flashbacks from when I had to use that in school instead of something like fusion 360
I wouldn’t say my hostnames are very creative, but they all have some kind of backstory.
Main desktop: POwOful
It’s a pretty powerful desktop, so why not call it that :)
Laptop: LenOwO
Can you guess the laptop brand?
Server 1: Shitbox
It’s my first server box I ever built, so it’s underpowered and pretty shitty.
Server 2: Stowage
My proper server with actual data parity, and it’s pretty powerful
Server 3: Jank
This one is another shitmix of hardware with random harddrives in raid 0. I am aware that they’ll die at some point, and all of that data stored on it will be lost, so i use it as temporary storage whenever I need to copy something from one machine to another.
Robot vacuum: suckywucky
Yea…
The new ones were garbage anyways. Mine is stuck at a polling rate of 10hz, and the acceleration is god awful
Oh onlyoffice works great! It’s spreadsheet function is far less buggy than excel and it’s smooth and snappy.
Could this work? I animated a reddit post (ft. Internet Historian)
Guess which option will be set to off by users, which youtube will make the default to “on”, and then entirely remove the button when users adapt to turning it off.
Shadow legends?
Anything is python if you use it incorrectly enough
If I remember correctly it switches to this logo during christmas
Wait till they see the vlc logo during christmas …
Or in physics terms, potential energy.
I switched from duckdns about a year ago as it failed to resolve the addresses for my jellyfin server. I ended up buying a domain from cloudflare for 3 years for about $4, and I self-hosted ddns updater to automatically grab the dynamic ip, and set it to a subdomain.
As for your nginx config, I’d imagine you could make 2 separate config files in sites-enabled
that are nearly identical, but listen for different domains.
Something like this:
#config file 1
server {
listen 80;
server_name example_a.com;
location / {
return 301 http://example_c.com$request_uri;
#or use an ip instead of example_c.com
}
}
#config file 2
server {
listen 80;
server_name example_b.com;
location / {
return 301 http://example_c.com$request_uri;
#or use an ip instead of example_c.com
}
}
#Or use "proxy_pass http://example_c.com;" in the location tag instead of "return 301..." if you want to reverse proxy the traffic
1.5Tb data cap, jeez. I regularly push 6tb of monthly traffic by myself. This feels like mobile internet all over again, but now with wired…
Thx for the tip! I’ll try to recalibrate it based on those instructions :3
Funnily enough noone noticed that anything was “out of the ordinary”. The event organizer, who isn’t techy, asked to use my pc so he could transfer some assets for display, sent them over, right clicked the photoshop files, and opened them in a cracked photoshop program i installed using wine. He then proceeded to add some finishing touches and export them as png files without noticing this pc wasn’t running windows.
The thing that caused the most hiccups wasn’t the os/software, but the hardware. The camera crew handed me some thunderbolt capture cards which didn’t work because my $300 laptop which I got for free didn’t support thunderbolt. We switched to some usb capture cards, and they worked perfectly without any configuring.
So I guess Linux has reached the title of It just works™️ (at least for this use case)
Thx. It’s the title screen background from the Interea visual novel :3
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