Can also confirm. I’m just the opposable thumbs holder for my cat’s selfies.

Can also confirm. I’m just the opposable thumbs holder for my cat’s selfies.

A lot of airports have detailed, and sometimes even interactive, maps online. If I’m hitting an airport I haven’t been to yet, I’ll always take a look at the map to see where I’ll be coming into the airport and where I’ll departing.
As others have touched on, having the flight ticket and photo ID immediately available to hand to airport security / Customs is going to help get through the process faster.
Almost all airport security has a little bit of a different layout, but the process is mostly the same. Queue up and wait your turn for an available Security or Customs agent. Sometimes staff are directing people which agent to go. Most times the agents will be yelling out for the next person. Be ready to hand them the ticket and/or photo ID. Customs will ask some basic questions like “Where are you headed?” “Business or Pleasure?” or they’ll ask if you’re bringing anything with you to declare (mostly talking about sealed food/drink items).
Next usually comes the metal detectors and luggage search. You’ll place your stuff in bins. Use as many bins as you need for your electronics, shoes, things in your pockets, carry-on, etc. Follow directions to queue up. Once you’ve been scanned, Security may ask you to step to the side and they’ll run a wand around your body. This is pretty rare and usually doesn’t happen.
After that, wait for your bins to come down the conveyer and you’ve passed imo the most stressful part of flying.
The most interesting Arrivals security I had to go through was in Mexico. They have everybody press a button in big room. If the light turns green, you’re good to go without being checked. If the light turns red, you’re in for a quick security check lol
I prefer to find my gate first before wandering around to look for food or go to the bathroom. I’m usually 45-60 minutes early for my first boarding time just to make sure I know where things are at, then I grab a little food if I’m hungry.
Depending on the size of the airports, it may feel a little overwhelming. Each gate has a desk staffed by the airline. Feel free to ask them any questions or ask any of them for directions. One thing I’ve found is that the airline’s app is usually more up-to-date with information than the screens or, sometimes, even staff. Once, I was able to notify the desk staff of a gate change before even they knew about it (very rare). Another time, I got a notification of delay just a few minutes before the screens updated the flight status.
If you give yourself enough time, everything will go smoothly.


Check out Netdata or Zabbix.
You’re free to be overwhelmed, whelmed, or underwhelmed in any country! It’s just uncommon to remove any prefix from whelm.
There’s also overwhelm as well! Cool thing about most prefixes in English is that they can be changed out for other prefixes or completely removed. Though, one wouldn’t quite hear somebody say antiwhelmed there’s still nothing against it.


In Balatro, the Ante is the boss’s health and chips are the amount of damage done to a boss. The poker hands are just attacks done to the boss’s health. They use poker terms because it’s inspired by card games, not because there’s gambling.


It’s important to note that your password has to be stored someway, no matter what, no matter where. How it’s stored can be varied, from hashed (think encrypted) to cleartext. I’m assuming lemmy is using hashed passwords, so if you’re concerned about your password being available to an instance owner, admin, or potential attackers, then you’ll need to follow safe password guidelines. Changing the concept from passwords to passphrases is a great start.
Always keep in mind, if the data isn’t stored on your device, you do not technically own that data. You have to trust the owners to be good data custodians and treat the data you give them as if it were their own private data.
I’ll leave this now internet-ancient sacred image for future passphrase converts.



This might be out of scope for the list, but I thought of it after I saw your response.
Stride3d game engine: https://github.com/stride3d/stride


For monitoring, i didn’t see Zabbix or Netdata:
https://git.zabbix.com/projects/zbx/repos/zabbix/browse
https://github.com/netdata/netdata
I also didn’t see OBS for broadcasting either:


Pterodactyl is probably the closest I’ve personally seen to what you’re looking for.
Short answer: Canonical is strong arming Ubuntu flavors into removing support for alternatives to snap (that run better and do the same thing). These types of decisions are generally worse for the overall Linux community.
Right now, a part of the Linux and Open Source communities are distancing themselves from corporate-sponsored projects given issues we’ve recently seen with RedHat’s CentOS and Canonical’s decisions with Snap and LXD
You’ve been keeping these for years, waiting for this moment.
For me, the $70 price tag threw me off, but I’m not a diehard MH fan.
I just checked the steam store and there’s already over $300 of cosmetic microtransactions? And the OST is… $75??? I get that it’s a “7 disc album” but damn does that feel expensive.