What were the limitations of borg that you ran into?
What were the limitations of borg that you ran into?
I think they run a lot of compute shader, so that they can offload part of the simulation to the GPU, so anything that reduces the utilization of the GPU could improve performance overall.
I've had bad experience with FocalBoard. Several times it lost data for no apparent reason, including during updates. Eventually I decided to stop using it because it was too fragile.
Do you know if hardware decode of 4K HEVC works on the Orange Pi 5?
I haven’t used passkeys yet, but I would hope that you can have multiple keys per site, not just one. So, after going through some initial pain of setting up each individual device, it should be nice having local-only keys for each of them, which you could revoke at any time.
Password managers are also adding support for passkeys, so you should be able to sync them if you so wish.
I only tried it on desktop. There’s a tiny progress bar at the bottom, but you can’t interact with it.
no seek bar
I really don’t understand who thought that removing the seek bar from a video player was a good idea…
Thanks. I didn’t realise you can’t do relays anymore on the selfhosted version. That sucks…
You can set up relay nodes in the Netmaker config, and enable them only for those nodes behind NAT that need relaying. I’ve generally had good experience with Netmaker—when it works, it works—but several times it auto-updated and wiped my network config in the process.
What is your experience with Netbird vs Netmaker?
Tailscale doesn’t require you to wrestle with certs or the networking setup required to do NAT traversal. And they do it well, you don’t have to wonder whether you’ve screwed something up that’s degrading NAT traversal only in certain conditions. It just works. That said, I’ve been through the wringer already on these topics so Headscale is not painful for me.
Does Headscale require additional work to deal with NAT traversal on clients? Or is it just for the controller node itself?
For what it’s worth, I usually install Ubuntu Server instead of Debian because it comes with a few more things out-of-the-box that I would install anyway. I have several installations of 22.04 that have been upgraded since 16.04 and they work no problem. (I also have a few Debian installations working similarly well.)
I doubt it’s not carefully worded in corporate speak. It’s much more likely just The Guardian’s sensationalism. Amazon have an army of HR people; they wouldn’t make such basic mistakes.
iPhone 12 Pro @ 87% checking in!
Here is a script to easily install WireGuard and generate client config files for any server: https://github.com/Nyr/wireguard-install