

Honestly Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas fits. It’s more a medium magic system, if that makes sense. Instead of not clearly defined rules it more just has ever changing, very simplified, rules.
Honestly Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas fits. It’s more a medium magic system, if that makes sense. Instead of not clearly defined rules it more just has ever changing, very simplified, rules.
This was a super cool video. I love the channel anyway, but this video was particularly good.
Dungeon Crawler Carl and The Bobiverse are both amazing series that are worth a glance at.
It would follow whatevers in his will (sort of). It’s fairly complicated
Yea diskpart is its own little beast.
Surprisingly really functional though. Probably my favorite windows command
What are bottles?
Office 365 online can be a good stopgap for those cases if you need it.
Fair play. I’ll absolutely concede that your position makes sense. It’s not quite how I envision it, nor understand it, but that’s fine lol
AAA just refers to production scale/marketing budget. While it can often be conflated with high quality, that’s not what the term refers to. Similarly, Indie does not mean low quality, high quality, or a particular level of risk
Madden, as a famous example, has always been AAA, but has rarely innovated much.
TOZO NC9s. They’re cheap, decent ANC, and no app.
You csn hate a company and like a product. They aren’t mutually exclusive.
Only the absolute basics.
That’ factually incorrect. You, sort of, defined the idea of racial superiority and purity. Fascism is not an ideology, but a system of government. It can often include racism and racial purity, but it is not required.
Fascism is:
A system of government marked by centralization of authority under a dictator, a capitalist economy subject to stringent governmental controls, violent suppression of the opposition, and typically a policy of belligerent nationalism and racism.
The crontab that is found at /etc/crontab very specifically states that it has a user field. I will readily admit that I might be misunderstanding it, but that feels pretty explicit to me.
Yes, you should never use sudo inside a users crontab. If you want to run as root then use the system crontab.
I appreciate the advice! I had never really heard about the distinction between the system crontab and user crontabs. While it makes sense in retrospect, I am entirely self-taught about this stuff, and nowhere I had looked had ever mentioned that there were two separate crontabs.
I would also encourage looking at systemd timers
Do you happen to know of a good resource to learn about those off the top of your head? I appreciate the suggestion!
I have edited /etc/crontab with the following 0 * * * * * root /mnt/nas/freshrss/backups/backup.sh. After waiting for the crontab to fire off, nothing happened.
I have edited /etc/crontab
with the following 0 * * * * * root /mnt/nas/freshrss/backups/backup.sh
. After waiting for the crontab to fire off, nothing happened.
So, right now I’m trying the system crontab instead of my user crontab.
Just to reiterate from my post, however, I have tried the full path. I was giving example paths. I should have been more explicit that by just “using dot” I meant using relative and absolute paths.
All paths have been full paths from the get go, though I did try cd-ing into the folder and running it with a relative path. My hope at this point is that it’s somehow a permissions issue as my storage setup is a bit odd with TrueNAS Scale running as a VM on ProxMox. Permissions with docker are usually hell, and I have to run literally everything that touches my NAS as root to get the permissions to play nicely, so it would make sense here that it’s just the permissions being upset and preventing access to the files.
I set a backup to run on the hour, so I’ll report back with whatever happens.
Why are people trying to replace Discord? Just for the sake of federation or…?
Cathedral modding is also similar in ideology to the Unix style of software development.
Each piece seeks to do its job well and without coloring too far outside the lines so that many pieces can come together to satisfy the users needs.