Yep, just do it in macOS using any audio editor, save up to 40 seconds as AAC M4A file, rename to .m4r and drag&drop onto your phone/iPad in Finder. Done.
Yep, just do it in macOS using any audio editor, save up to 40 seconds as AAC M4A file, rename to .m4r and drag&drop onto your phone/iPad in Finder. Done.
The last time I’ve used glances - to be fair, some years ago - it caused the main CPU usage on my Raspberry Pi 3. However, looks like it’s been fixed recently.
Possibly a bit overkill, but I’m running Zabbix in 3 containers (Core, WebUI, database). Using its agent installed on all my machines, I can monitor basically anything. Of course, you can set limits, alerts, draw graphs, etc.
That’s what happens if you rely on 3rd party services that are very eager to please anyone that spells out DMC without even waiting for the A.
The fear of naked (intact) female bodies, i.e. censoring of even the slightest nudity, when at the same time, it’s totally fine to have minors play computer games where they can dissect other humans in great bloody detail.
Oh, and chocolate that tastes like somebody barfed into it during manufacturing.
There should still be the rather tame World Digital Brasil… but their Tinfoil server is down at the moment, it seems.
You might want to read the recent blog post (linked at top) and discussion on Hacker News first.
Kemie and Kina
I threw up a little…
The brown paper-bag thing with alcohol in public. I mean, everybody and their dog knows what’s in there, right?
And the fact that people ask if you need help if you decide to NOT take the car but instead walk the 5 minutes to somewhere.
Also: Microwave. Apparently, lots of people heat their water in the microwave. (See pinned comment here.)
Thing is, DMCA doesn’t apply all over the world. There are countries where whatever electronic device you buy is actually yours and you’re allowed to do whatever you want - including messing with the firmware. Also, I’d argue, the DMCA doesn’t apply if you dump the firmware/keys for yourself only without distributing it.
That being said, it’s unfortunate that these people are mostly in the US where the party with more money decides when a lawsuit is over and not some sane judge that just throws this case back at Nintendo. But after the stuff with Disney+ and the recent one with Uber, I’m not surprised at all anymore.
But nothing is circumvented. People have to provide their own keys, right? It’s like suing GnuPG b/c it can decrypt stuff…
Just serve the code locally from a Gitea or Forgejo instance. Then let’s see how Ninty is going to DMCA that. Also, I’d love for someone to challenge the DMCA’s as copyright should not apply to an emulator that doesn’t use any original code and doesn’t come with ROM files.
You never know when this public instance is going away and don’t have a say in additional custom search engines.
I run this on a Raspberry Pi at home. My ISP bumps me to a different IP address every few days. So no worries there for me.
The thing with SearXNG is that it will search in multiple search engines in parallel and then aggregate the results. If the same result appears in all of the queries, it’ll be weighted more than one that appears in only one of the results.
This way you get very neutral overall results compared to the biased ones Google usually delivers.
Also, you can easily define custom search engines, so you could make it search on your favourite website as well.
GitHub supports Jekyll page generation. Or at least did this a few years ago.
And please make sure to also generate an RSS feed for us feed reader users. ;)
How about making a Shortcut?
You might want to look at Terramaster NASes. E.g. their F4-423 is basically an Intel NUC married to a SATA controller. They have an internal USB port where you can pull the OEM flash drive and insert your own, then install e.g. UnRAID or OpenMediaVault on it.
That will be my next device if my Synology DS415+ finally dies.
Great!! Didn’t expect that. Love the matching colours. Happy riding and always keep the rubber side down, shiny side up.
Your iOS devices should appear in Finder if they’re either connected via cable or in the same WiFi. Click the device to open the overview page in Finder. Drag&drop the .m4r file from another Finder window onto the overview page. The ringtone will be installed.