Yeah, that’s why I have a silk touch shovel, so I can pick up grass blocks.
Yeah, that’s why I have a silk touch shovel, so I can pick up grass blocks.
sudo apt install flatpak libfuse2t64
Used and refurbished Macs aren’t that expensive.
Every Flatpak, Snap, and AppImage works on every Linux system I’ve tried.
Hey! I have a life. It just wholly revolves around my computer.
So that definitely means his administration will not continue military support, because that man is the biggest liar in history.
Excuse me, it’s Muphry’s Theory. It hasn’t been proven enough to be a scientific law.
Do yourself a favor and download MusicBrainz Picard.
Miraculous Ladybug. Such a dumb show, but I like it. It’s definitely a villain of the week show with a magic fix everything button.
Bad ones, sure. Wait, no, even bad ones sell. They’re just wrong.
That’s cool. I’d love to see that turned into a game, just to explore the scenes.
RAID with parity is technically a backup, just a mostly ineffective one. It’s a backup that allows you to recover from exactly one scenario, single (or double) device hardware failure.
But I definitely understand the mantra “RAID is not a backup”. It’s not what most people think of when they say “backup”.
I guess you can’t see if your eyes are closed.
Believe the mass graves and filled ERs.
Fox News tells you not to believe your eyes, and conservatives trust Fox News more than their own eyes.
This is good. We need more GUI tools to keep the noobs out of the terminal. Not only because that gives a better impression, but it also protects them from doing a command wrong and really hurting something.
If you can, comment on those old posts to let people know those instructions don’t work anymore. Welcome to the light side. :)
I don’t think they understood the purpose. xD
http://nymph.io/
This project technically started in 2009, as part of another project called Dandelion (which then was renamed to Pines), then around 2014 I pulled it out into its own project, Nymph. I worked on it on and off, until 2021, when I rewrote it for Node.js as Nymph.js.
It now runs my email service, https://port87.com/
Here’s the oldest code I can find on GitHub from July 7, 2009:
https://github.com/sciactive/pines-components/blob/144ce877e1ec9af7fa34c8eb8b11aeb7ae0efb5e/com_entity/common.php
And here’s the first version as its own project from Sep 8, 2014:
https://github.com/sciactive/nymph/tree/fdf5f770da7e5acc6938debbaeb8c09cfd080e15/src