

I’ve been toying with this idea, items are classified as “new or perfect condition” “used but good condition” " near or EOL"
If you return it in the lower tier, you pay the owner a third of the value.


I’ve been toying with this idea, items are classified as “new or perfect condition” “used but good condition” " near or EOL"
If you return it in the lower tier, you pay the owner a third of the value.
I hear they are pumping more money into roadkill extract for curing autism.


This, apart from the home assistant use, may be a great solution for an all in one klipper setup for 3d printers (I currently use a RasPi, and a tablet as a touchscreen), or installed inside a chunky keyboard, paired with one of these USB C all in one hubs as a PC in a keyboard build,. Neat.


Just an FYI, changing a battery in a phone with a glued back cover is fairly trivial. A hair dryer Is usually enough, tons of youtube tutorials, and you can get plastic back covers to replace the shitty glass ones from aliexpress for peanuts


My 5 year old Xiaomi has 8G
Some engines will adjust spark advance by using the knock sensor, and when using a higher octane gas, will be more efficient. The gas is not more power dense, but it gets used more efficiently. If your car doesn’t, then it’s not better to use higher octane gas.
Doesn’t having WSL under the hood negate Linux’s inherent security?
I’d much rather have Windows shit containerized within Linux.
Winboat looks nice. I’m planning to play with it today. I’m also going to try distro box etc. Wish me a happy Virt-day. (yeah, yeah, I know where thee door is.)


I’ve had several French cars, starting with an R4. That one was good, did exactly what it was designed to do. Next I had Talbot Horizon, an american (Chrysler) car with a very good diesel engine. Then I had a Peugeot 505, that had a good engine that was over complicated to the extreme, to the point that the oli overflow pipe litrelly crossed over from one side of the engine to the other, a truly brain dead design. Also the electrics in the back were literally routed under the rear light seals, so a seal failure meant that the electrical system shorted when it rained, the central locking and windows actuators had similar design flaws.
I also had a Xara, which had several secondary ecus, which had to be progressively eliminated , until I sent the thing to the scrap yard, out of despair, despite having a sound body and engine.
I’m in Europe, and I sometimes play the game of observing how many old cars (15+ years) I spot by nationality. Plenty of German, Spanish, Czech, Japanese and Korean. Very few Italian or French.
My daily driver now is a 26 year old Skoda. I do all maintenance. In nearly 500.000 km, it has had zero major failures. A few minor things, starter (Bosch), two window regulators, a CV joint, and the usual, belts, clutch, brake pads… Consumables. I love how logical the engine bay is.


Why didn’t they pour money on Jitsi?
European, mature, FOSS…
I fear grift is there somewhere.
Also, French engineering has a habit of turning sound concepts into messy overengineerd but underbuilt results.
I don’t know why you are being downvoted.
The general populace is uneducated/dumb, that’s why safeguards are implemented.
I’m all for the idea of freedom, but making the exercise of that freedom informed.
I do onsite IT support, and much of my job is preventing and undoing user fuckups.
How many apps do you need to install per day? How many of those are sideloaded? I think that
If you look into fauna before each major extintion events, things get weirder and weirder, so weird that Hollywood would have a hard time selling a movie with that shit


17 years is prehistory in IT years. Basing your comments on experiences from nearly 2 decades ago is just plain useless


I’ve used random Linux based video editors in the past, like 15-17 years ago. They were… Not great.
Would you mind rereading your first sentence?
Random? 17 years ago?
Us nerds don’t buy laptops?
I don’t either, but there are many in my family and friends I will gladly support.
I’m a fight simmer, and have used Flight gear. The main top options now are MS flight simulator, with incredible vusuals, and Laminar’s Xplane, better flight model, so good in fact, that Laminar has a version which is FAA approved for simulator hours for pilots certification, and still great graphics. Both are way, way better than Flight gear (which is truly amazing for a FOSS flight Sim.)
If flight Sims are key to your decision making, I would pay for X Plane, a pay once model, that runs natively in Linux, Windows, and Mac, then spec around that. Next decision for me would be the GPU. In Linux most people seem to recommend AMD. I haven’t delved into the issue, since I’ve had AMD for a while.
My usual decision process is:
1- analyze needs (programs and stuff that are important).
2- budget.
3- decide general specs.
4- get the best power supply I can afford within budget, gold, active PFC, modular, etc. Spec for at least 20% more wattage than maximum projected consumption Do a bit of research, googling etc. Be wary of ranked lists from established publications, as they are often influenced by manufacturers. So many people don’t understand that the PS is the single most important component to ensure that everything else works correctly. Forum/reddit threads are better.
5- a good case. Fractal is my current go to.
6- GPU
7- processor.
8- board, Ram, memory, SSD, cooling
9- yoke, joystick (hotas), and pedals. 10 - everything else.
I’ve found a listing for a bunsh of these for 57€. Looking into them, I saw that there is a non mini, sff, that is waaaaay better for a homelab. Still small, but impressively expandable, 4 dimm slots, 4 pcie slots (low profile i7 ), one of them x16, internal space for 2 3.5 drives plus an ODD tray, where you can mount a 2.5 hdd or ssd, a bajillion usb…