Swimmerman96

joined 2 years ago
[–] Swimmerman96 2 points 3 months ago

It does get disabled to the Quarterback, however I believe the Head Coach can flip between channels to talk to Offensive and/or Defensive coordinators during the play.

[–] Swimmerman96 3 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

It doesn't have a speedometer function, but I selfhost Owntracks for personal location tracking with my Android smartphone.

It has a back end that an android app sends location too, and a front end that displays those location points over a map. It can display lines between consecutive points, show a heatmap of the location points, filter location history within windows of time,, and more.

[–] Swimmerman96 3 points 8 months ago (1 children)

I use Thunder! I've been using it for a long time now, and really like it.

[–] Swimmerman96 3 points 1 year ago

I can only really speak to your first point. When imported my existing library, I did it using Sonarr/Radarr as applicable. They have a manual import method, here's a description of Sonarr's.

Unfortunately that'll probably work best if they're formatted in a way Sonarr can readily recognize, something like /Season ##/S##E## - .ext. It may take a little work to get there, I found a program called mmv which helps out a lot. It allows you to move files that match a pattern, capture parts of pattern, and use that captured part to name the output file. That allowed me for format entire seasons at a time, but that method does rely on most files having similar names to begin with.

[–] Swimmerman96 27 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Since Jellyfin v10.6.0, it's had a feature called SyncPlay allowing multiple users to watch the same thing at the same time (coordinates pauses, fast forwarding/rewinding, and all that between clients). I've used it and it worked like a charm, although I did find that not all clients support it.

[–] Swimmerman96 31 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I doubt Reddit builds a decent search engine, that doesn't actually help them at all.
If users can search, they find a previous post pertaining to what they want to see/know and they move on.
If there's no search, users can't find old posts or comments so they make new posts about a previously posted topic and more comments are made as other users react. That's more content, even if low quality from a user perspective, that shows engagement which can be sold to advertisers.

That's before considering the engineering effort it takes to make a good search engine, constantly fine tune that algorithm, and try to outpace those that are trying to game the search algorithm.

[–] Swimmerman96 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I like Czkawka for detecting and handling duplicate files, similar files, empty directories, and more.

[–] Swimmerman96 26 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Sunday afternoon, after careful evaluation of a significant security concern, we made the intentional decision to sever our ties to the internet.

I feel like most big announcements like this end up being Ransomware. Cutting off from the wider internet feels like a weird move to defend/mitigate that? Unless it's to reduce exfiltration?

[–] Swimmerman96 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I assume you mean SSL/TLS certificates for internet accessable applications? I use a reverse proxy called Caddy in a Docker container, which handles requests from the internet and directs them to the proper docker container based on the subdomain. It also handles my certificates automatically, requesting a new Let'sEncrypt cert just before the old one expires using a community made plugin.

[–] Swimmerman96 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You may be able to use the CLI tool mmv, which can be installed through the apt package manager. It's great at renaming files that are starting a similar naming convention and ending with a similar naming convention, you could use mmv to move your files. It also suppose sum links and hardlinks. It's what I used to rename folders of tv shows when I need to do that.

[–] Swimmerman96 4 points 1 year ago

It's all about what you value, and supporting the things you love (or rely on, in a more utility sense). I'd value the speed, the lack of data collection that may be used against a user, the speed, the location options, and that same provider being in business for time to come. When I'd need a good VPN, nothing else will do. That seems worth the couple of USD per month to me, whether that VPN is for obscuring traffic I don't want others to know about (whether it'd be because of those facilitating the connection or the other end of the connection).

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