glassware was usually significantly above comparable eBay listings (despite the labels sometimes claiming otherwise)
They have stickers which tell you they’re cheaper than eBay when that’s actually not the case? Isn’t that illegal?
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glassware was usually significantly above comparable eBay listings (despite the labels sometimes claiming otherwise)
They have stickers which tell you they’re cheaper than eBay when that’s actually not the case? Isn’t that illegal?
why is that?
That’s what I’d recommend. Why Google and not Aegis or another non-Google FOSS app?
Why do you need that? Just use one of the already existing ones like Aegis.
Why require keycloak specifically? Maybe I want to use another authentication gateway.
Ideas what you can do. These are all SHOULD and not MUST requirements, so pick and choose what you can reasonably do in a realistic timeframe without overburdening yourself. Some of these steps can be outsourced to your community.
You can try to make a twelve factor app but some of their advice is probably not suited for your application. You will end with some 7.5factor app which is fine.
Follow SemVer and provide detailed instructions for upgrading major versions.
Use a build system which is easily installable and a language where you don’t have to upgrade dependencies every second for security issues (looking at you, npm/nodejs).
Don’t include a webserver which does HTTPS, let the people run their own reverse proxy.
Test your setup with and provide multiple web server configs for nginx, Apache2, Caddy, Traefik.
Test your setup with and provide multiple default configs for bare metal (with a dependency manager), Docker, Podman, Kubernetes, Kata Containers.
If you need a DB, include the possibility to migrate from a self contained one instance SQLite to a multi container pgsql/MySQL setup.
Write database migrations in both directions so people can downgrade on failures.
Make it possible to configure your system via ENV variables, ENV files and config files. Provide instructions on best practices and sane defaults. Explain these defaults and make clear configuration is optional.
Make it possible to disable authentication to add Authelia or LDAP through the webserver. Make clear that this is only to be used for external authentication.
Make it possible to run multiple parallel instances of your software without affecting the database consistency, e.g. for high availability or horizontal scaling.
Provide a versioned, documented API (does not need to be public) and use it yourself for your frontend. Provide a telemetry endpoint which is human readable and machine readable, so Prometheus or a similar system can scrape it.
Installing Docker on a QNAP device is straightforward, thanks to the integrated Container Station application. Here’s how you can do it:
Install Container Station: Log in to your QNAP device’s web interface (QTS), and open the App Center. Search for “Container Station” and install it.
Enable SSH: If you need SSH access, go to the Control Panel > Telnet / SSH, and enable the “Allow SSH connection” option. Click “Apply” to save the changes.
Create a Docker Container: Once Container Station is installed, you can create Docker containers using the Container Station user interface. Go to ‘Containers’, click ‘Create’, and select an image from the available registries.
Configure Network Settings: Container Station supports multiple network modes and VLAN for flexible deployment. You can manage these settings according to your need.
Manage Containers: After creating your Docker containers, you can manage them through the Container Station interface, where you can start, stop, and configure your containers as needed.
For detailed instructions and the latest updates, refer to the official QNAP Container Station guide. It provides comprehensive information on using Container Station, including creating, managing, and deploying Docker containers.
You should be able to run syncthing in docker on qnap. Which model and software version is it?
Keep in mind that sync is not a backup, neither is RAID.
If you do multiple passes you can alleviate some of the downsides of low bitrates. You can always easily spot it in dark areas. I despise watching space movies or shows on streaming services because of the resulting excessive banding artifacts.
I really really liked Limewire and Shareaza. That coupled with collection search would be awesome.
Notifications turned off for almost everything, always.
Best QoL feature IMHO. My husband and bestie can get through with calls, everyone else gets called back.
I would, if the game wouldn’t be so expensive 💀
In this case probably Vulkan, as developers tend to use current computers which support Vulkan, which is faster and younger and has less overhead.
In other cases you probably want OpenGL because older GPUs don’t support Vulkan and usually you want to include as many users as possible.
I know how ML works, my comment was a persiflage on over-simplifying the topic of AI and logic. I originally marked it with an /s
to indicate sarcasm, but I think this gets lost with newer generations, so now I replaced the /s
with the upside down emoji (🙃) which also seems to indicate sarcasm.
an analog computer that the guy gave feedback to images on. If it’s a circle or a square, if it guesses right or wrong
That reminds me of the Square Hole Meme.
if you listen to marketing of companies using Machine Learning, AI can do everything right now.
yeah, they’re really in the wrong to think that we’d have some technical advancement within the last 40 years and we should expect more than a probabilistic text generator. 🙃
8bitdo controllers are good. They care about making good input devices.
I’d love to have a vscodium alternative written in a faster and more efficient language. Most editors and IDEs don’t quite fit my workflow, while vscodium does.
You can reduce transmit power and enable meshing and roaming in conjunction.