

I checked and while it seems to certainly have an influence, it doesn’t seem to be the main thing making a difference.
I joined Lemmy back in 2020 and have been using it as qaz@lemmy.ml until somewhere in 2023 when I switched to lemmy.world. I’m interested in systemd/Linux, FOSS, and Selfhosting.
I checked and while it seems to certainly have an influence, it doesn’t seem to be the main thing making a difference.
I’m forced to use Windows due to work and damn is it slow. File explorer feels so sluggish compared to Dolphin
Isn’t eye strain mostly due to distance?
Kener is a sleek and lightweight status page system built with SvelteKit and NodeJS. It’s not here to replace heavyweights like Datadog or Atlassian but rather to offer a simple, modern, and hassle-free way to set up a great-looking status page with minimal effort.
Seems like it’s an uptime kuma alternative?
This is the game that is built on SpacetimeDB. It’s quite an interesting project.
US Citizens have been getting deported, we’re far past that already.
Time to set up other backups
I’ve been looking for something like this myself. I’ve tried:
In the end I went with Grist. It may not be specifically designed for it, but it is very flexible.
I don’t know either
Especially this strange dig
…it’s good you guys are learning about vulnerable minorities, but it’s not news to everyone…
I know, but that’s on them. They should’ve been more specific.
They said “without excluding” not “without including”
I’m talking about the implementation of RAID5/6 for BTRFS specifically.
The RAID56 feature provides striping and parity over several devices, same as the traditional RAID5/6. There are some implementation and design deficiencies that make it unreliable for some corner cases and the feature should not be used in production, only for evaluation or testing. The power failure safety for metadata with RAID56 is not 100%.
Do you know if the documentation is outdated? Has this changed recently?
I’m pretty sure it’s an automated system that makes these issues. The accounts looked like bots. However, that only makes it even weirder.
It used to eat data but that’s not been the case for a few years
Isn’t that a RAID5/6 thing?
People often use a ridiculous amount of emoji’s in their readme, perhaps seeing it was a README triggered something in the LLM to talk like a readme?
They don’t, because it’s not an actual issue for any human reading it. The README contains the data and the repo is just for coordination, but the LLM doesn’t understand that.
I’ve always imagined it being the Venn diagram intersection of high IQ and arrogance, is that correct?
The great part of tackling problems that aren’t real is that nobody can see you haven’t solved anything.