I’m definitely 100% addicted. I would probably go through some sort of mental crisis if I were shut out. But I also hate it. I want to unplug, but I’m unable.
I’m definitely 100% addicted. I would probably go through some sort of mental crisis if I were shut out. But I also hate it. I want to unplug, but I’m unable.
I used to not get why someone would buy a physical DVD/Bluray/CD/whatever. Well, now I get it. I’d much rather own it than “own” it.
I feel like the people who pay for Twitter are probably dumb enough to pay whatever price the muskrat wants, so why not make it $200 a month?
This project technically started in 2009, as part of another project called Dandelion (which then was renamed to Pines), then around 2014 I pulled it out into its own project, Nymph. I worked on it on and off, until 2021, when I rewrote it for Node.js as Nymph.js.
It now runs my email service, https://port87.com/
Here’s the oldest code I can find on GitHub from July 7, 2009:
And here’s the first version as its own project from Sep 8, 2014:
https://github.com/sciactive/nymph/tree/fdf5f770da7e5acc6938debbaeb8c09cfd080e15/src
Yeah, that’s why I have a silk touch shovel, so I can pick up grass blocks.
sudo apt install flatpak libfuse2t64
Used and refurbished Macs aren’t that expensive.
Every Flatpak, Snap, and AppImage works on every Linux system I’ve tried.
Hey! I have a life. It just wholly revolves around my computer.
I’m a software engineer with pretty severe ADHD, and I wrote an email service that helps a lot:
https://sciactive.com/2023/07/17/the-best-email-for-those-who-struggle-with-organization/
Technically?
No.
Excuse me, it’s Muphry’s Theory. It hasn’t been proven enough to be a scientific law.
Do yourself a favor and download MusicBrainz Picard.
Miraculous Ladybug. Such a dumb show, but I like it. It’s definitely a villain of the week show with a magic fix everything button.
Bad ones, sure. Wait, no, even bad ones sell. They’re just wrong.
That’s cool. I’d love to see that turned into a game, just to explore the scenes.
RAID with parity is technically a backup, just a mostly ineffective one. It’s a backup that allows you to recover from exactly one scenario, single (or double) device hardware failure.
But I definitely understand the mantra “RAID is not a backup”. It’s not what most people think of when they say “backup”.
I guess you can’t see if your eyes are closed.
Microsoft Windows