Last Christmas. It’s the Christmas one night stand song. And it just repeats the same thing a thousand times. Turn that shit off.
Last Christmas. It’s the Christmas one night stand song. And it just repeats the same thing a thousand times. Turn that shit off.
I learned about this http response code too late. About 4 years ago I was working at a startup and I was the “lead engineer” (aka only engineer) on a project where I had to design and implement an entire REST API. I really wish I would have put this in somewhere, since we weren’t doing code review (because it was literally only me).
I’m a software engineer, I have taken classes on docker, I host my own web pages, etc. and I STILL can’t get it my own instance of Lemmy running. The instructions are unclear. They have bugs in their docker-compose.yml file. It’s really bad. I have been working on it after work each day for the past 4 days. So far I got the UI working, but i can’t log in or create an account. And I had to disable logging to get it running because I was getting an error with how the logger was defined in the yml file.
And because I was frustrated, even though I really, really didn’t want to, I tried using their ansible setup. It still didn’t work, and it completely fucked my server. It took me a few hours to undo all the shit it did.
It’s not in a good state right now. Hopefully they fix it soon.
If you want a cat, adopt one. Don’t buy one. There are thousands of cars without homes that need one. Save one from being put down instead of buying one from a breeder that is exacerbating the problem.
What exactly do you mean by your Tears of the Kingdom comment? That game was constantly dropping frames. Any time you used ultrahand or fuse, the game would drop to <15 fps. I still really enjoyed the game despite that, but the performance was really poor and inconsistent. Breath of the Wild had similar issues, but it felt less severe. Or maybe I’m misremembering, since it has been 6 years since I played BotW on the switch.
Drums need to tune, too. You want to make sure the head has equal tension near all the nuts or else it will sound wonky.
No. No poop.