I misread this at first. Thought you were talking about Radicale! Phew…
I misread this at first. Thought you were talking about Radicale! Phew…
Fuck how much are you spending on thera.py?
Lost little Lemming…
Could still be hair!
R releases all have code names that are Peanuts references, like “Bunny Wunnies Freak Out”.
Any software recommendations for self hosting a WebDAV server?
I’m not such a monkey, and I could probably contribute if I put my mind to it, but I just don’t have the time… Instead I try to contribute documentation and money when I can. Everything helps!
I have a Ryzen 3700x that had similar problems. In my case disabling Precision Boost Overdrive and regular Precision Boost eliminated the crashes. PB being just the regular boosting behavior of the CPU. With it turned off the CPU basically only adjusts its frequency between the idle frequency of like 800 MHz to the base clock (3.6 GHz or whatever).
I think basically what happened was the BIOS was running the CPU too hot and eventually it just couldn’t stably boost to the higher frequencies which would cause problems. It’s an easy thing to try and see if it works for you. In my case I was able to salvage the CPU by putting it into a server whose workload doesn’t benefit from moment to moment super high CPU clock speeds.
One good latex pillow for me.
Realistically, I wouldn’t soil my body with their taint. But pigs and chickens gotta eat too.
KeePassXC (there’s a Firefox extension too) and Syncthing are the first things I add to a new install.
Damn, hitting them hard with reality at the end there lol
I love Syncthing but that initial setup can be a pain. Sometimes you need something quick for a one-off transfer.
I was hoping this would fill that hole, but this still requires a decent amount of setup. Warpinator is still king in this case imo.
Their PowerPanel Personal and Business editions both seem to work with all of their UPS models. I used to run PowerPanel Business on a basic tower-style model.
In R:
assign("x", value)
Oh yep, my bad. Didn’t see the iOS stipulation initially.
The key is focus your time and effort on the ones that are really important to you, and be able to adapt to changes. This way you can make the switch to a less abusive product / platform / tool / whatever it is more easily when it inevitably goes to shit.
This is the user-side responsibility of interoperability.
I’ve been really enjoying the latest Thunderbird.
Let’s embrace that stenotype life.