What about Traccar? I see a section in there for “drives”, although I just leave mine on all the time
I’ll believe it when I see it- Spotify lossless was announced years ago. I don’t believe them.
I noticed that movement combined with a balanced team really helped make higher hazard levels tolerable. For example, you can solo things a bit more on lower levels, but on higher levels having a good combination of crowd control (Driller excels in this) and single-point high DPS (such as the secondary with Engineer) makes it really balanced. We’d set up strats like Driller creating sticky flame traps all over to dump DPS downrange and soften targets while gunner can finish them off, or freeze targets allowing stuff like sentry guns to shatter them. It’s really the team cohesion that makes hazard levels easier. When we paired our overclocks together in unique ways it made for easier play through (e.g. intentionally keep to flame or freezing, or, intentionally use both to leverage the temperature shock strat)
Unsatisfying resolution, wiped windows disk, cleared partitions, and let windows do an automatic install. Interestingly it decided to install a windows boot manager alongside the Linux one.
Is syncthing falling out of favor these days?
GPL is the only good license out there. MIT just leaves too many opportunities for abuse because corporations won’t ever do what is in the best interest of humanity.
I had a Tesla try and take a left turn into me, honking the whole time, as I was headed straight (I had a green + crosswalk sign on) through an intersection. I was inconveniencing them with my existence.
That’s the beauty about it- it doesn’t matter. Your body gets stronger and adapts. That said, make the transition smooth to avoid injury. Listen to it as your work up the step count and mileage, and explore your strides and how you rebound in the step to find something that feels strong and doesn’t facilitate pain. The classic shoe community is all about “how can we build a shoe that protects your feet from discomfort” whereas the barefoot shoe movement focuses on “how can we strengthen our body such that the protection isn’t required”. There’s obviously a balance, and that’s why barefoot shoes still have things like soles to prevent injury from sharps and provide traction.
The Primus outsole is around 2mm thick. It’s a night and day difference compared to a normal shoe. I actually think the whole “we need arch support argument” is sorta overblown because I have super high arches and had issues with my feet pronating in, putting stress on my knees, and since I’ve swapped things got much better. You change how you walk, so you don’t slam your heels down like most do, instead relying much more on Achilles and calf muscles. My foot fascia feels stronger as do my calves after daily walking in vivos, and this was noticeable a few months after swapping. The first week was the most odd, as you somewhat have to learn how to walk to not have as much impact (let your calves be the “spring” and land midfoot or ball of foot) especially on things like concrete.
This is why barefoot shoes exist, e.g. Vivobarefoot. Thin, puncture-resistant soles that prevent puncture and slice damage while still allowing your feet to remain connected with the ground and get stronger.
RIP OP
Signal is not designed for anonymous communication. This is fine. Some of us like having a messaging platform that is E2EE because we don’t have to trust the midpoints. I get to chat with my family in a convenient manner while not worrying about the telecom company doing things like logging SMS contents. Different tools for different jobs.
Do we prefer Ansible over Terraform?