

Probably doesn’t have it set up with subnet access on to his friends network. Which tbf you wouldn’t actually want for this use case.
Probably doesn’t have it set up with subnet access on to his friends network. Which tbf you wouldn’t actually want for this use case.
I’ll often get ads for the podcast I’m currently listening to. Like, I’m already here, what more do you want?
The thing that really annoys me is when they auto insert variable length ads cause it frequently messes up and if you stop and resume a lot it can end up messing up the playback.
Sometimes I think everyone should be forced to watch/read more sci-fi so that they come up with less stupid ideas. Then I remember the Torment Nexus meme.
I use Ubuntu a lot and can say I’ve never used the Ubuntu software center. I’m old enough that I still accidentally type apt-get instead of apt though.
Just did it to test on a couple of files, worked fine.
The least bad imo is making a two drive raidz1 then expanding it.
So the broken pool is kinda stupid and you shouldn’t do it, you will be running without parity the whole time but if you want to risk it it does work.
Or… If you have the drives and space, you can combine a bunch of smaller drives with mdadm (assuming Linux but freebsd has geom I think) and then use that as your third drive, then once everything is copied do a zpool replace. That way you keep full parity the whole time.
Edit: latest version of zfs supports raidz expansion. So you could create a 2 drive raidz1 then copy everything over then expand it. You will still be running your source disk without parity but at least the destination would be safe.
I know you kid but even the 3ds fits a decent number of lines on screen.
My man, most of us aren’t connecting to our mainframes on VT20s these days. Even on my phone screen the three extra lines nano takes over vi aren’t a problem.
Also if you have the time to go through all that you have the time to learn ctrl+x.
Probably init before that then. I don’t think the kernel cares unless explicitly told to care, I’ve seen some embedded Linux with interesting permissions.
I think it’s systemd not the kernel. If only Linux had “repair permissions” like vintage MacOS.
Also you can’t really use Apple TV properly without an Apple device. Same with iCloud. Actually really any service they make only works properly with their full stack.
I guess his question is “is that happening?”
Acting like Apple didn’t do the same thing with khtml to make WebKit.
AFAIK Apple has said they are only going to use official RCS spec with no extensions and will work on adding encryption to the spec. Google has announced that they will work with Apple and the GSMA to implement official RCS encryption.
Data integrity protection, higher resiliency, less chance of being corrupted, etc.
Btrfs offers a lot more than just snapshots.
Why would you put home on ext4 instead of btrfs?
Yeah isn’t Arch heavily inspired by the BSD way?
Oh man this looks so much simpler than having to Google/man page how to ssh tunnel every 8-10 months.