
You don’t amass an ungodly amount of money by spending it.

You don’t amass an ungodly amount of money by spending it.


I don’t have a video for you but I’ve been using Actual for over a year and really like it. I recommend it. Caveat, I very actively interact with my budget (inputting things manually) and cannot speak for it’s account linking features.
Look, I’ve got a sweet tooth.
Roasted pineapple is delicious. Coat it on some brown sugar, roast it, then carve off the toasted bits. Repeat.
I’ve been considering Donetick for this same purpose.
I think if the last one was a result of the sun not getting closer but the moon getting farther, we’d be okay right?
Like I know it wouldn’t great for certain things.


Docmost?


I had a two bay Synology device for many years before I upgraded to a home lab. I liked it quite a bit as a beginner. The interface was easy to use, dead simple to set up the basics, and it had some advanced capability for those curious.
I’d strongly recommend a “plus” model. They are usually only slightly more expensive than their non-plus counterpart for a fairly significant upgrade.
It’s okay to be wrong =p
Not anything below the skin.
The toast thing is a myth.


Uh, you’re not looking at Toronto lmao


Why and how would Lemmy know that you’re using a VPN, and why would block only specifically images? That doesn’t make sense to me.
Arguably, yes. When you pay with one of the phone wallet options, you transmit a unique set of info, like a verification token or 2FA token for example, which your banking service confirms is valid for your card and the transaction goes through. But the vendor never receives your real card info.
Not for nothing, tapping to pay with phone is not the same as using the physical card to tap to pay. In the former case, your actual card info is not transmitted.
This genuinely makes me anxious. Cannot identify the majority of the books at a glance plus there’s so much potential for tumbling down here, goodness forbid I want a book in one of the stacks. I need to look away!


Nah, my Linux journey has been far from flawless. I troubleshoot stuff on Linux as much or more than I did on Windows.


I reckon the latter part might be the problem for a lot of people.
Largely privacy, data ownership, performance, and a general shift towards foss and self hosting.