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American magic bean companies like Beanco, The Boston Bean Company, and Nvidia
Omg 🤣
American magic bean companies like Beanco, The Boston Bean Company, and Nvidia
Omg 🤣
Lots of people mentioning collaboration / multiple users, yet all your replies seem to completely ignore this aspect. I’m guessing you might live alone and are struggling to imagine some very common use cases here.
Why not both?
I use syncthing for transferring files around my local network, and nextcloud for sharing files with others.
IMO these are related tools but designed with very separate use cases. Use the right tool for the job.
That’s a good point. I should have said “indistinguishable after some tinkering”. You raise a valid complaint, though it’s not a deal breaker for me.
Why is it a bad way to handle things?
I have an alias set up and SDKs enabled. The experience is indistinguishable from a regular install. But you could also layer it onto the os image or install it in user space if you don’t like flatpaks for the extra resource usage or something. That’s a complete non issue for me though.
I do my main development with Bazzite. I use the Neovim flatpak for my editor and toolbox for builds and such.
Playnite
Abiotic Factor. Looks like it should have come out in the early 2000s, but so tight.
I just bought a drive from them last month (from Canada) and just received a $60 duty bill. The time before that I got nothing. YMMV
Wanted to see if I could do anything exciting with the new Satisfactory dedicated server API. There’s no documentation of it anywhere online, but there’s a random markdown file documenting it in the installation directory. Got it working but turns out it can’t do much. Oh well
I think that’s my main complaint with the game. Once you find a way to beat the boss, you just go for that build every time. It’s so punishing and the path to get there is so long, that it’s a massive disincentive to try new things.
Abiotic Factor and Satisfactory
I’m currently using Unraid for pretty much every thing you listed, and I love it so much. I really appreciate being able to set up almost everything through the web interface. It makes my hobbies feel fun rather than just an extension of my day job.
That said, I bought the licence before they switched to a subscription model. So if I were starting over I might look into free alternatives.
You can still buy a lifetime subscription for Unraid, it’s just a lot more expensive.
Cool makes sense, thanks for the reply! And yeah, I don’t think I’m quite there yet.
Out of curiosity, what’s the benefit of splitting those?
I’ve been meaning to try Caddy, but I just can’t even imagine something simpler than NginxProxyManager.
This is the best take I’ve seen on the whole kerfuffle so far.
If you’re plugging a USB drive into my home server, then I have bigger problems than malware.
I always thought kernel devs were smart people. I’m kind of shocked learning a new language is this big of a barrier to them.