

*Moldy Carcass
*Moldy Carcass
“I would have, but you died”? :D
Yummy! I’ve heard they’re using hair spray too, in order to keep things in place and/or glossy.
I assume older motorcycles built before 2003 are still legal in the EU today, and that the drivers are responsible for turning on the lights when riding those.
The word “lifetime”, when talking about permanent subscriptions, always refers to the lifetime of the service (or provider), rather than the lifetime of the subscriber.
A single folder synced between all of them, or a separate folder for each, syncing everything to a single device?
WAF? Wow and flutter?
Batteries not included.
Is it really? I’d say an alternative is generally just “another option that has (more or less) the same features”. Better isn’t really implied, as that’s someone’s subjective opinion.
Sounds like a pretty interesting collection to me!
In Germany the government now fines you for piracy, using a common VPN isn’t enough anymore.
Why isn’t a common zero-logs VPN enough? How would the government know? Encrypted VPN traffic can’t be decrypted, at least until we have quantum computers, right?
Is this the one? https://zellij.dev/about/
I just read that navidrome
Handles large libraries!
Plays well with gigantic music collections (tested with ~900K songs - 2/3 FLAC, 1/3 MP3)
Though, I don’t know if any of the supported Subsonic API clients can handle as much…
being able to control the player from an android phone was so convenient and I don’t know any other player that has similar.
Well, you can remote control playback in Kodi through apps like Kore, and browse the libraries, but it’s a totally different experience in comparison to dedicated music player apps. Kodi is more like software for a home theater PC, a.k.a. media center.
The best viable solution I can think of, that includes a desktop UI and remote control from a phone, would be hosting a Jellyfin server for the music library, then using the client app for Android to remotely control another client app running on your desktop. I do that everyday (but mostly for video content), since I’m using my phone to control playback on a Raspberry Pi running Kodi with the “Jellycon” client add-on, but that could be any other Jellyfin client, such as a regular Jellyfin desktop client.
I’m a pretty untrustworthy stranger on the internet, it seems. The domain is still available, and I’m somewhat intrigued by it, though not enough to actually grab it. But I did change my name to Stephanie nonetheless…
Thank you for thoroughly explaining this. Your explanations make good sense to me.
I assume we’re talking about software testing? I’d like to know more about:
The meaning of negative and positive tests in this context
Good examples of badly done negative tests by LLMs
Ronapp McDonapp?