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Show me a music store I can purchase music from on my phone through an app, and I’ll purchase it.
Show me a music store I can purchase music from on my phone through an app, and I’ll purchase it.
I’m also going to push forward Tilda, which has been my preferred one for a while due to how minimal the UI is.
It’s a W3C managed standard, but there are tons of behavior not spelled out in the specification that platforms can choose to impose.
The standard doesn’t impose a 500 character limit, but there’s nothing that says there can’t be a limit.
My go-to solution for this is the Android FolderSync app with an SFTP connection.
I’m not familiar with creating fonts specifically, but you’ll want to commit any resources necessary to recreate the font file, including any build scripts to help ease the process and instructions specifying compatible versions of tooling (FontForge in this case). Don’t include FontForge in the repository, of course.
The compiled font files should be under releases in GitHub for the repository.
Git isn’t generally meant for binary resources but as long as they’re not too large, they’ll be fine. You just may not have meaningful ways to compare changes easily.
I mean, sysvinit was just a bunch of root-executed bash scripts. I’m not sure if systemd is really much worse.
Systemd was created to allow parallel initialization, which other init systems lacked. If you want proof that one processor core is slower than one + n, you don’t need to compare init systems to do that.
Correction: migrated to GitLab, but I don’t expect they’ll want to keep it there.
The Nuzu repository is already wiped.
I’ve been disappointed in general with the XPS line in recent years. Dell has made some keyboard changes that I am not a fan of:
I’ve been purchasing the XPS line of laptops since 2013, but I stopped as soon as those changes landed and the Developer Edition of their laptops shipped with inferior hardware compared to the Windows ones.
On Android, it moved SMS messages from the shared SMS store upon receipt and to Signal’s own database, which was more secure.
Of course!
The Docker client communicates over a UNIX socket. If you mount that socket in a container with a Docker client, it can communicate with the host’s Docker instance.
It’s entirely optional.
There’s a container web UI called Portainer, but I’ve never used it. It may be what you’re looking for.
I also use a container called Watchtower to automatically update my services. Granted there’s some risk there, but I wrote a script for backup snapshots in case I need to revert, and Docker makes that easy with image tags.
There’s another container called Autoheal that will restart containers with failed healthchecks. (Not every container has a built in healthcheck, but they’re easy to add with a custom Dockerfile or a docker-compose.)
It’s really not! I migrated rapidly from orchestrating services with Vagrant and virtual machines to Docker just because of how much more efficient it is.
Granted, it’s a different tool to learn and takes time, but I feel like the tradeoff was well worth it in my case.
I also further orchestrate my containers using Ansible, but that’s not entirely necessary for everyone.
You can tinker in the image in a variety of ways, but make sure to preserve your state outside the container in some way:
docker exec -it containerName /bin/bash
Yes, you can set a variety of resources constraints, including but not limited to processor and memory utilization.
There’s no reason to “freeze” a container, but if your state is in a host or volume mount, destroy the container, migrate your data, and resume it with a run command or docker-compose file. Different terminology and concept, but same result.
It may be worth it if you want to free up overhead used by virtual machines on your host, store your state more centrally, and/or represent your infrastructure as a docker-compose file or set of docker-compose files.
Honestly, taking the time learn Docker and then learn more about the specific containers that you want to use is probably going to be the easiest way forward in your position. If you have any specific questions about Docker or the containers you’re looking at, I can try to help.
When it comes to network mounts, I’ve found it a lot easier to use rclone for that purpose, and that’s currently what I use for the backend of my Plex server.
I bought a used 2018 model over a new current model because of the lack of physical function keys.
Also, Dell, bring back Fn + Left for Home and Fn + Right for End!
Who looked at a great keyboard layout and decided, “I know! I’ll make this Developer Edition hardware more difficult to develop on!”
I’m using a combination of:
It depends on the model you run. Mistral, Gemma, or Phi are great for a majority of devices, even with CPU or integrated graphics inference.