Yes, I do this quite often. There’s a thing called bridges that even those cars need.
The thing with this image is that a single bus or 2 would clear this. There is not a lot of people in this image.
Yes, I do this quite often. There’s a thing called bridges that even those cars need.
The thing with this image is that a single bus or 2 would clear this. There is not a lot of people in this image.
I often had to go to the registry on Windows and the registry is way less user friendly than modifying files on Linux. When we say that we have to use the terminal for more complicated things on Linux, it’s usually just modifying files that are well commented so you know exactly what you’re doing. If you can read of course which isn’t always a given.
For sure there are scripts and 3rd party apps that can modify the registry, but you can have the same thing on Linux too.
And today with how advanced KDE and Gnome are, the user needs to go less and less in the files. Almost everything I do is in the home folder too. I require root less and less, mainly to install packages.
I think it mainly comes down with what users are used to. People are used to the quirks of Windows, so Linux becomes scary and hard. If it was the other way around, Windows would be considered to be complicated. That’s my take.
By curiosity, since you’re already using Traefik and Pocket ID, what does Tinyauth provide? Traefik can already do forward auth through a plugin. It redirect to picket ID directly
To manage my docker containers I migrated from and to multiple tools. I started directly with Unraid with individual containers. Then I discovered docker compose and stacks. So I migrated to portainer. Splitting the postgres and mariadb databases were the worst thing in this. Then I tried dockge, so migrated from portainer to that. It lacked some portainer functionality, but was fine for a short while.
Finally I discovered Komodo and migrated to that as it’s FOSS. Now I’m only on Komodo, I have no server limit (5 on portainer), had all the functionality of portainer and more. It is my go-to docker manager and the one I recommend to everyone. The only “issue” is that you need to write the name of the stack and click confirm twice if you want to redeploy, restart, stop, destroy. Or you have to click confirm twice after saving when you edit your files. Not much of an issue and it can also protect from accidental clicks. My next step will be to migrate my stacks compose and env files from UI defined to files on the server that I can sync.
I personally like combining both on desktop. Scrolling for web and occasional file browser or terminal, tiling for coding and ricing, tiling for messaging apps, etc. It depends on the need. That’s why I went with MangoWC. I keep niri for my laptop though (where I also don’t want blur anyway).


That is cool. I use dcli which is quite nice to use and easily manages dotfiles and scripts. I see you’ve added post install hooks which would allow to manage dotfiles for example.
I really like to use a declarative package manager on a different distro than NixOS. My current install is managed entirely by that tool with specific scripts that modify some config files like fstab for instance.
To use Excel with macros, I don’t even think the web version will cut it. Your only option is to use something like winboat to use excel inside a windows docker container as far as I know.


🤣 Exactly what I was asking myself. If their justification is “this group wasn’t massacred, this group was instead”, how the fuck is that better? I never understand how people can be so willing in justifying authoritarian regimes and massacres…
I mean… The pro LLM people must surely have a tool to do OCR and analyse natural language of documents… I personally don’t trust these that much, but they surely do much more than me.
Yes, just lightly press on the brake pedal.


Immich photos are one of the main thing I backup. I use duplicacy and I backup to backblaze B2 storage. It does incremental backups. Same thing with docker persistent data or other things I consider important.


Why this complicated setup? Komodo handles auto update by itself. It also update the whole stack at once, so no shutdown of the BD while the app stays up. Just have 2 checkboxes to tick.
The less stuff the better, it’s essential in case you have a failure. I only have to redeploy komodo, then all my stacks will be ready to get back online. I even removed watchtower.


Yeggi, their search is also way better.
This is especially French. In Quebec we have very different insults. Here we could for example say : Ostie de calisse de tabarnak de crisse d’épais de viarge. We can use some of those words as verbs too, like : M’en va t’en crisser une! Or m’en va t’en calisser une. It can also be positive like : ça c’est une calisse de bonne toune! Shouting a “Tabarnak!” Is very satisfying.
The main difference is that French insults are mainly centered around sex. In Quebec it’s mainly around religion.
There is a whole article on Wikipedia https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec_French_profanity
I have a surface go 3 and a surface pro 7. I installed Arch on both and also enabled secure boot. Installing Arch works, but wifi on the installation drive doesn’t work. I plug in a usb hub with Ethernet and I’m fine after. Enabling secure boot is harder, but it can work.
La qualité est variable chez Canadian Tire. Les prix aussi. Il y a une règle, attendre les spéciaux. Tout revient en spécial assez vite. Après, pour la qualité, ça dépend toujours. J’achète des outils et il y a une bonne différence entre Maximum et Mastercraft. Maximum est souvent garantie à vie aussi. Par exemple, j’ai une paire de pinces qui sont une réplique de knipex, mais à une fraction du prix. Elles sont excellentes et garanties à vie.
Ils ont aussi beaucoup de produits cheap chinois. J’ai un souffleur pour mon compresseur qui ne donne pas la bonne pression, un autre bout qui leak de l’air, peu importe ce que je fais. Bref, pas excellent. Mais ça venait avec un kit pas cher et d’autres bons outils, donc je reste satisfait overall.
While I agree, it surly is not how the CPC sees it. The CPC had an historic participation and only a circonscription had to vote for Pierre. In a way, he was rejected by his constituents, but not by Canada. If it wasn’t for the NDP partisans that voted liberals, we probably would have a conservative government. So yeah… I’m not hopeful for the future, next elections might be deceiving.


Immigration makes the housing demand worse, but most anti-immigration arguments completely forget that they help with the supply by bringing manpower to build the homes. So in a healthy market, it would balance it out. Unfortunately, both of you touch on a few points that makes this market unhealthy, so supply is restricted way too much. Bringing more manpower doesn’t help since it’s not the bottleneck.
The anti-immigration arguments are mainly from the racist right that looks for a boogyman while ignoring the real causes of our issues.
Didn’t follow that, thx for the info! I’ll look to use freecad instead.
Of course, what we’re seeing here is a strategic realignment of Taiwan as the US looks more and more unreliable. I might be wrong, but it’s my take.
What made the US very strong is eroding very fast before our eyes.