

I can confirm caddy is more of a high availability proxy than a proper load balancer, but it does it’s job and has an api you can hook up to a gui if you want. Or like I do - to a config repo with ci/cd deployment.
I can confirm caddy is more of a high availability proxy than a proper load balancer, but it does it’s job and has an api you can hook up to a gui if you want. Or like I do - to a config repo with ci/cd deployment.
Remember you can sometimes buy those games on GOG or itch.io too, and more money goes to the devs.
ORB: Off-World Resource Base is currently deeply discounted on GOG.
Umm akhchually the nearest star is just 8 light minutes away fixes glasses
I think you figured it out. It’s not about immigrants, it’s about undesirables.
And those can be political or social - look up the first targets of German or USSR occupation in 1939 Poland, or who Khmer Rouge killed.
The goal is to keep the docile, undeducated masses, and everyone that “stirs the pot” gets erased.
I had two fitbit trackers before getting Sense, and honestly, I keep it on life support, buying replacement 3rd party straps and charging cables.
When it inevitably dies, I’d move on. I never found a use for Google assistant, it can’t even set my google maps navigation properly, can’t set a reminder.
The only thing it ever did of value to me is 5 minutes of asking it for a joke.
All this fuel talk when IRL you can’t drive anywhere if fuel in the tank is older than several weeks.
Worth pointing out it could be fully remote, but France or Germany residence is required. From what I heard it’s an accounting issue for them, explained as each country needs their own accounting scheme, which, as an EU citizen, seems like a skill issue to me.
TIL Sonnet 3.7 is worse than 3.5. How come?
I work with windows for over 10 years, and use Linux daily for private stuff, including being a nerd and a gamer, and some side gigs for at least 8.
If something is weird, doesn’t work or breaks in Linux, I can usually find the culprit and help fast. It’s out there or it’s so obscure I need to puzzle it myself.
If something like that happens on windows, pray someone already had that issue or Microsoft decided to write an article about it, because nobody will help, and most search results point to bot responses about scf scannow, dism at best, and straight up reseting your system to factory defaults.
Point being, I like figuring out stuff in Linux, and I dread opaque bullshit Microsoft gets away with.
Even your network drive example, in my experience is a coin toss. So many variables, hidden settings, weird registry keys with no documentation. Yeah.
Most commands are the same. They recommend just aliasing docker to podman so you can keep using your old commands.
Oh hey that’s awesome, maybe I’ll put my RX460 back into the jellyfin VM for transcoding. I need to migrate that box anyway.
I use yakuake (or guake if I still used gnome), I love having a consitent terminal slide down the screen every time I press a shortcut, especially if it’s supplememtary to what I’m doing in the graphical shell.
There’s nothing to access from signal, the keys are local to each chat. WhatsApp another thing.
Meanwhile CIA is promoting Signal. USA should sort itself out.
Yeah I see. I don’t know if I can help, as I’ve only used caddy outside of podman, as a separate machine, pointing back to my services.
Why, will they jump me from a bush?
Please confirm for me, the client traffic looks like proxy is the source on the containered services?
I haven’t had that issue with caddy before, but may be I’m using some particular config to make sure it always passes the client IP.
Some services also need a setting to “know” they are behind a proxy and should look for client address in the headers like x-forwarded-for.
Most of these are videogames, but also medieval commoner life, archeology, learning how to read music sheets, Morrowind challenge playthroughs, history and economy of Thailand, programming enterprise grade apps in rust.
This week? AuDHD doesn’t let me have one for long.
Because actually writing code is the least important part of programming.