

For my own domains I’m using Migadu since they support unlimited domains per account. Quite happy with them…


For my own domains I’m using Migadu since they support unlimited domains per account. Quite happy with them…
Admitting you were wrong in a situation (or opinion) is a very mature and strong skill to have. It also makes communication and relations much more honest. A lot of people never learn this.
So, if you know you were wrong. Sincerely apologize. Then stop! No complaining, no blaming. And especially no bitching about being triggered. Being triggered is on you, not her.
If the conversation is going well enough you might be able to explain yourself a bit for mutual understanding. But for now it is on you to make up for the breakdown in communication. You don’t have to be her friend, but you are both adults and need to work together in at least a professional courtesy. Save any feedback for a later conversation and try to keep emotions out of it.
Good luck!


I second that. Community was great. The absurdity of the episode with the ABBA soundtrack still makes me laugh.
I don’t know about AES67 but I’ve used Snapcast now for a few years and it works great. I use a central Mopidy service that streams to a few Snapcast clients connected to audio devices (not directly to speakers though). The clients run on normal PC hardware, Android and some on Pi’s with DAC’s from Hifiberry. The setup was very DIY but has been running very stable after that.
Ha, soon most of them don’t even know what ‘class A(…’ means. They just vibe some stuff, and when it doesn’t work, they vibe some more!


In the Netherlands it is usually grouped as frisdrank, loosely translated as fresh-drink.


That AI bot must be saturated with break-up and “Delete Facebook, hit the gym!” advice…


Interesting, I’ve never heard about that… What is the difference?


Hosting a Gitlab for work and for my private projects I agree. The CI/CD is excellent and I really like the way they handle issues and merge-requests. Gitlab is great but quite a beast, so throw some good CPU and fast storage at it.


Don’t trust a word that idiot sais. Pete Hoekstra is a lying piece of shit.


It’s a sad state of affairs. I would pay for youtube in a heartbeat if it wasn’t connected to the biggest spyware company in the world. But now, even while paying you still get ads and they still track you. The people working at Alphabet are bad and should feel bad.


It is a nice look into the switch from a perspective of a windows user. But since he is experimenting there is a also a lot of bad choices or wrong information.
He gripes about things not going smoothly while replacing his whole desktop environment (when was the last time you replaced your explorer.exe?).
And clamping to old ways of doing things. Which is understandable but would go a lot better with a little bit of guidance. Why force Chrome while Firefox was probably pre-installed or Chromium also works. Using Filezilla while Dolphin can probably do it in an integrated way. Using Notepad++ while Kate probably covers most of his use-cases.
This doesn’t invalidate his experiences but it does indicate a resistance to switch.
There is some valid criticisms as well though. The docking station that bugs out or KDE Connect that is confused. We can improve those things, but hardly force Logitech to bring their (horrible) software suite to Linux.
Maybe he should give it another few weeks to actually feel that while his old ways might not transfer over 1:1 the new ways give him a lot more power.


The asshole also keeps waving his Dutch ancestry around. But he left as a small child and can’t even speak the language. After the lies no Dutchman wants anything to do with this lying piece of shit.
I must say I haven’t been much impressed by movies this year, but maybe you have some recommendations?
I think the movie was… just fine… There were some funny moments and I like Jack Quaid. But there was really nothing special in it. And it irked me a bit to see the protagonist get pretty nasty maimed… even though he just shook it off.
All in all hardly a memorable movie for me. I’ve recently watched Borderline and that one made a better impression.
Hmm, the years are a bit faded but first install of Redhat in 1996-7 somewhere as a short experiment, then Slackware, SuSE, LFS, Gentoo, and since then lazy with Kubuntu… Might switch again soon with the Snap fiasco.
I always liked penguins and Tux… But that movie cemented penguins as my spirit animal :)
The BOFH and his PFY are still helping their users…
Joplin has their own sync-server you can run as Docker container; free for personal use…