This is great! I’ve been wanting to provide support. Now I’m signed up for monthly.
I am owned by several dogs and cats. I have been playing non-computer roleplaying games for almost five decades. I am interested in all kinds of gadgets, particularly multitools, knives, flashlights, and pens.
This is great! I’ve been wanting to provide support. Now I’m signed up for monthly.
Jon Peters, one of the producers, had been trying to shoehorn a giant spider into a movie for quite some time. It wasn’t that he thought it particularly needed to be in Wild, Wild West. He just wanted one, so he tried to get it written into every movie he was involved with until he finally succeeded. Hearing that really helped me understand the rest of that movie.
I did. One of my cats liked to spend as much time as possible up there as a kitten. Then he grew into a long, muscular, 18-pound beastie, and continued to sit there. It was wonderful!
And clearly enjoying it. It’s good of you to give him one!
Both of ours have chairs too.
“Our dogs are not spoiled. They are competitively compensated for the user experience the provide.”
I’d missed the cat! She impersonates a sofa cushion quite well. Protective camouflage.
All dogs should have their own comfy seats. And the rest of us make do as best we can. :-)
Mine do that too.
I appreciate that you said it “for” mental health, but not whether it’s intended to be positive or negative. :-D
That sort of attention to detail is what separates the talented amateurs from the professionals.
I don’t know if this will help, but I’ve been using Plex to manage my music and other audio for more than a decade. It pulls in metadata from online sources and allows me to search or apply filters. That is a lot more versatile than anything I could do directly with the files.
If you aren’t interested in running your own server, look at some of the more sophisticated player apps. Many of them can provide similar metadata features. Then you wouldn’t have to worry about how the files are physically organized.
I assume she looks like that because she is trying to solve the worlds problems. She has a better chance than most of succeeding.
Those extra limbs are helpful in supporting all that cuteness.
I use option #1. Each instance of KeePass maintains a local file, but updates them automatically whenever it opens or closes. I also back up the file to my personal server automatically, so I have a copy even if the cloud service fails for some reason.
This setup has been serving me well for a long time.
He’s adorable! I’m glad he is being well taken care of.
Absolutely. Survival is a win when it comes to geese.
What’s just a little smaller than a goose? I do know my limitations.
I can feel the softness through the picture.
I’ve been known to tell my husky-mix “Return with the survey results” when I let him out into our fenced yard. Every time he goes out he seems to do a systematic grid search of the entire area.
It’s okay to joke with your wife, but don’t let him hear it.
He is adorable!
I have a small UPS to keep my fiber and router working for a while and I have a larger UPS for my server. Even the larger UPS will only keep the server going for maybe half-an-hour, but most outages here are short. For me, the most important benefit is that my UPS will tell my server to shutdown when it begins to get short of power. Graceful shutdowns remove the risk of corruption and data loss.
I’ve just been looking for something to replace One Note. The timing of this announcement worked out really well for me. :-)
Thanks!