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It works fine with Syncthing so long as you only ever have the database open on one device at a time.
It works fine with Syncthing so long as you only ever have the database open on one device at a time.
No, you can copy wine prefixes around all you want. You may have to adjust the graphics settings in the games though.
A decent quality USB 3 flash drive will be plenty fast for a read only live boot.
X11 isn’t secure and it can’t be fixed apparently
Which is why so much work has been going into Wayland, which will replace X11.
You would use a large cluster of servers all stuffed full of enterprise grade SSDs if you need that kind of write speed.
I see an LG WH14NS40 on amazon for $55 US that will write triple layer discs. Where are you finding $130 drives?
Blurays will be much more reliable and will write much faster than cheap flash drives. A double layer disc only holds 46.5 GiB though and triple layer discs are still somewhat expensive.
Skyrim and Fallout 4 really need a CPU with very good single threaded performance. If you have a lot of cores, make sure nothing is running in the background so you can get a higher boost speed on the cores the game is using.
It doesn’t let me select more than 1 file to add.
It’s easier to type a command than it is to add files to Handbrake one at a time. I can also run multiple encodes simultaneously. It takes 2-4 to max out my CPU depending on the codec and resolution.
Handbrake is good for a few files, but I still prefer ffmpeg when doing a large batch.
I imagine the latency would be unacceptable for any sort of FPS game unless you were on fiber and very close to the data center.
Rewriting something in rust could create more vulnerabilities. You would be throwing away your well tested code and starting over from scratch in a language you may be less familiar with. A memory safe language doesn’t protect against everything.
I’ve got Starlink and IPv6 works fine. That’s the only way I can host anything since IPv4 is CGNAT. You have to use your own router for IPv6 since theirs is a piece of junk.
My cell carrier is T-mobile and it’s IPv6 only. They do have some sort of translator for accessing legacy sites though.
You can use the --download-sections
parameter to specify a time range. --download-sections "*0-600"
would download the first 600 seconds to the nearest keyframe. To make it exact, you would have to re-encode the video after downloading it.
For making the thumbnail square, you will probably have to write a script to extract it, crop it, and re-insert it.
It looks like they are trying to compete with fedex on how much damage they can do to your package.
That’s not surprising when a lot of phone cameras use AI filters. They should probably have separate labels for photos generated by AI and photos edited with AI.
I typically look for 1080p X265 encodes around 2-4 mbps to save disk space. I will download higher bitrates for anything with a lot of film grain since it will get very blocky at lower bitrates.
I can’t tell much difference between 1080p and 4K unless I’m very close to a large screen. Also, most 4K files are HDR and I don’t have anything that supports HDR.
They will usually block port 25 so you can’t run a mail server. It’s unusual for an ISP to block everything unless you are on CGNAT.
Lutris uses separate prefixes and doesn’t do any deduplication. You will need a separate tool for that or just use a filesystem like btrfs that supports deduplication.
I’ve never used bottles, so I don’t know how it handles deduplication.