

Well your first mistake was going to YouTube for information


Well your first mistake was going to YouTube for information
Kernel dumps? I doubt that any monitoring agent would be any more responsive than what you’ve already listed.
Gnome is designed to mimic MacOS, and the top bar is a fixture there. KDE is designed to mimic Windows, but also lets you configure way more than Windows ever did. You can put it on top in KDE and tell it to hide when not in use, if you want.
Can we pin one of these posts? The same thing gets asked even few days and the answers don’t change nearly that frequently
Who are they backed by? Have they had a third-party audit?
I used to use SpiderOak from way back when they had a free tier, but their product is on life support. Currently, login is broken, so I can’t even get my data out.


Depends. A while back, I was looking for an old, relatively obscure but unimportant album, and could only find one copy on eBay. It was only a couple bucks, so I bought it, ripped it, and uploaded it. Now it’s preserved and available.
I also had an experimental EP album I downloaded from YouTube that I really enjoyed. At some point the author took it down, so I uploaded it to archive.org, again for preservation and availability. Later the author found it and commented something like “hey this is my work, what’s it doing here”, so I took it down. But I still have it and I’ll put it back up when they stop making music.
If it was something easily available for a few bucks, I wouldn’t publish it. Creators deserve compensation for their labor too. They need to eat. For something that they’re charging way too much for, and they’re not hurting for cash, especially if it’s not easily available, yeah I wouldn’t have a second thought about pirating and republishing it.
In your case, with the 99% availability, I’d try to complete the torrent and seed in any way possible. If that’s not possible, I’d purchase and republish, filling in the missing files if possible or creating a new torrent if not.


Sure. But as long as Matt Mullenweg is still in charge, WordPress is toxic.


Yeah, pci passthrough would probably do it. I assume you used the best-supported virtual adapter and drivers in the guest. But failing that, you could also try USB passthrough. You should still be able to get full gigabit (i.e. ~800Mbps) on one of those, even with passthrough.
But I still don’t recommend it, because if your host has issues, your firewall and router do too.
Well, those do different things. Expose the VPN, connect via your domain name.


They get more cash up front for capital expenses, like buying servers. Operating expenses, like hosting fees, can be paid out of this or the subscriptions.
Eventually, they’ll go out of business. Every company does on a long enough time scale. Or maybe they’ll get bought. Either way, they’re certainly not expecting to go through the heat death of the universe.
They have their own browser extension that does that, plus gives you an “archive now” button, and some other stuff I don’t use.


I’ve been using it for my torrents. No complaints.
Well, sometimes gluetun has been unable to connect to a server. But I worked around that by just adding multiple servers.
I can’t speak to speed, because the only thing I run through it is my torrents. I just set and forget, and later on, the download is complete.


What are the English titles? You might try looking for the original titles. Especially on chinese-language trackers.
Yeah this is really old and out of date


Does it have multiple PSUs? A single chassis can still be a single point of failure.


The hell? This is the third post like this you’ve made in an hour
You’re trying to run before you can walk. Run a “hello world” HTTP container, no cloudflare or proxy, and make sure you can reach it. But test it with your phone on mobile data, or https://downforeveryoneorjustme.com/, because it probably won’t work on the LAN without NAT loopback/hairpinning.
Also, don’t put jellyfin on the internet anyway, it’s not designed for it. If you want external access, use a VPN.


You should probably ask the developers then. But the answer is probably to support things like password resets in environments with multiple users. It’s less development effort to implement it this way than to maintain multiple code paths with varying levels of account management.


Then you’re free to patch it out.
My money is on the Nvidia drivers. What versions of everything?