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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)CR
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330
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2 yr. ago

  • No of course not, but if it's run under proton/wine it doesn't even have access to any normal files. When it's run natively it does (documents and all that). I'm not saying it's doing anything with this, or even that it would make sense.

  • Not in general. Typically, games with kernel level drm or anticheat just didn't work at all.

    Borderlands 2 specifically has a native Linux version though, and it may or may not abuse this fact. It isn't run in a sandbox-like environment like Windows games that run through proton, but according to protondb it does run through proton? In any case yes, it's probably better than running it on Windows.

  • Absolute zero issues with netcup (EU/de). Also comparatively cheap usually, and has frequent sales (always the same offers, afaict).

    DNS is included with Domains, but I'm using desec.io as my DNS mainly for full dnssec compliance (free, de based, if registrations are open, works with certbot DNS challenge for letsencrypt).

  • It's a massive red flag. It implies that they are actually storing the password instead of a (preferably salted) hash and that they have no idea what good security practices are. Storing a hash leads to same size strings, no matter the length on the password.

  • Basically OpenWRT is for dedicated, purpose built hardware, highly compact and essentially "embedded". OPNSense is for running a (potentially much more capable) firewall on x86/x64 (even if it's a small specimen like N100 or whatever). They fill a somewhat different role.

  • Depends on your date format. For it to be a problem to begin with, you need to use a date format with "/" as the separator. If it's 1st of Jan or Feb 1st then depends on the order.

    And of course you need to enter an actual fraction, instead of like 0.5. This also narrows down the locations where this is an issue considerably. I think it's mostly north America where fractions are more commonly used instead of decimals die to the imperial system, but there might be other places where it's common, too, and I just don't know about it.

  • Witcher I thought was great. It's what an open world RPG should be. Interesting individual/small stories, great over all story, and good gameplay/fighting (actually challenging, but not dark souls levels).

  • During some random sale I had bought rdr2 for PC (steam). At the end of my refund time of 2h I had enough and just refunded. I wanted to play a game not watch a movie with mandatory walking between scenes. The only gameplay was some tutorial-esque shooting practice.

  • I don't know a single person who graduated "on time". This may differ from country to country, but here the nominal times are just waaaay unrealistic. I'm sure it's possible, but at least for me I would've missed many opportunities, and I'm glad I took the time.

  • The direct shortcut for opening task manager actually also had special handling for problematic situations. This includes low memory and high CPU.

    I've had situations where the direct shortcut worked, but ctrl-alt-delete didn't. Never had the opposite.

  • Had this open for a while now as the most recent tab I didn't close. For the record there are 64 open tabs, this is just the most recent one.

    Was gonna look into analytics and monitoring of opnsense, and because if I bookmark it I just forget about it, there's a tab open. The other 63 tabs have a similar history...

    https://roguesecurity.dev/blog/opnsense-loki

  • I would argue it's still better than keeping it closed though. It really is a half way mark. It allows those that do care and have the know how to actually fix the game they wanna play.

    I highly doubt it'll lead to Valve selling copies, let alone a financially relevant amount. So it can't exactly be classified as exploitation either. Basically I think it's fine.

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  • I disagree with those saying that you can't do a build for that budget, but I would suggest looking into used parts, at least for some things, to improve the result significantly.

    Since your system goal doesn't seem to be storage related, as nextcloud includes storage obviously, but typically isn't used to house multi-terabyte data sets. So assuming you can make that work for the "future homelab projects" to with dual 500gig NVME as storage. Search for a used mITX board+CPU that can accommodate that (has the slots), and go from there. Things like CPU cooler, if not part of a possible mainboard+CPU bundle, should be selected after the case at that is the limiting factor for it. Didn't skimp on RAM size if you can (new or used is fine, depends what you can get in your area).

    With this list you're basically done to get it up and running.

  • I mean for ksp2 saying it failed cause they had "no experience with this kind of work" is kind of weird, since neither did the ksp1 devs when they started that. And they didn't fuck it up either, let alone this badly. Remember that it was a passion project of harvester, working at a PR firm that just happened to let him do it under their roof and employment. The company did not even have any basic experience in game development, arguably even software development in general.