

I might get shit for this, but I used ChatGPT to generate the code for a basic, single page, html/css, static website.
I might get shit for this, but I used ChatGPT to generate the code for a basic, single page, html/css, static website.
I use email as an analogy. Most non-tech people are familiar with the idea of there being different email providers so I use that concept to describe the fediverse.
Where possible, avoid buying from companies that are complicit. It’s not always possible but it’s worth trying.
I’ve used apps like this to help make decisions:
Vote with your wallet. Money is the only thing that matters to the people in charge here
Hmmm you might be able to first install Debian 12 and make sure the fan control works properly, then just install the proxmox application inside of that
https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Install_Proxmox_VE_on_Debian_12_Bookworm
“Visiting an exhibition of children’s drawings, Picasso (according to Roland Penrose) said: “When I was their age I could draw like Raphael, but it took me a lifetime to learn to draw like them.””
I saw this quote on a display when I was at the Picasso museum in Malaga last summer
This is what’s being referred to:
How about ShareX? I’ve been using that as a SnagIt alternative for a few years, but I was never a heavy SnagIt user though.
Hospital SysAdmin here.
Our infrastructure is roughly 95% windows and 5% Linux or Unix. Simply put: the requirements of the software/systems that the hospital requires to function properly is what dictates the OS.
We have a couple of major systems running on a handful of AIX Unix boxes and several dozen other systems that run RHEL, Cent, and Ubuntu. Not including hypervisors, the rest of our infrastructure is windows based and ALL of our workstations are windows.
Every app is unique, and annoyingly there is no consistency within all of a single companies applications. For example, I’m working on a GE Carescape upgrade which uses CentOS 7 but GE Time and Attendance uses Windows Server.
Idk, I’d say it brought us together (against RedHat) pretty quickly.
I started self hosting when I had only 100Mbps down/10Mbps up. For about 5 years years I told my friends and family that I didn’t have fast upload speeds so if several people were streaming at the same time there could be issues. Beggers cant be choosers, so they got what they got. That being said, I always tried to get smaller files so that less bandwidth was needed and that helped a lot
I lived alone so 100Mbps down/10Mbps up was plenty for me and I wasn’t going to upgrade to a faster plan. I also worked from home with those speeds without any issues and I would have continued with that internet plan if I still lived there. My new place includes 1.2Gb down/up so bandwidth isn’t the bottleneck for me any longer.