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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/)GH
Posts
3
Comments
419
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Yeah, the only thing I've ever seen is the MOK management thingy your bios will throw you into if something wants to add a new key, but iirc that can only list the key you're about to add, not all of them. I also have no idea how you get to that menu without adding a new key.

  • According to this service, that domain never had any subdomains, so looks like there's just nothing there at the moment.

    Not sure how reliable it is, but it did correctly identify all of my own subdomains for a website that no one ever goes to.

  • I guess the equivalent would be burning down a traffic control building or something, taking out the traffic lights (assuming those are centrally controlled, i have no clue tbh)

    But even that would be mostly solved by sending out all the lollipop people.

  • I think they're both good for different use-cases. I use nextcloud myself on a truenas system. I sync things like my pictures to nextcloud, and delete them from my phone after I've sorted them into the correct folders.

    This way my data isn't clogging up my phone and other things, is still available from anywhere (as long as my home internet doesn't go down), and it's still safely stored on redundant storage.

    This does take a bit more setting up than something like syncthing, though it wasn't very difficult at all. Basically install the docker image, tell it where my data goes, and set up a new dns record if you want it publicly accessible. I personally run it through a zerotier network so I don't have to do that.

  • I use Material Files (from f-droid) as my default file manager, which includes support for mounting FTP, SFTP, SMB, and webdav shares. It doesn't handle the connection getting interrupted very well, so if that happens i have to restart the app. Other than that it's been working great for my SMB share.

  • Yeah, it looks cool and well thought-out, but I just don't really see a use case for this. Maybe if it was more lightweight it could be used as a portable keyboard/controller, though I would personally probably still just bring an xbox one controller instead.

  • I was recently comparing some phone plans and found that nowadays, you mostly just pay the actual price of the device, plus the normal subscription costs, no interest or anything.

    Got a Pixel 8 Pro from Odido (awful service btw, would not go with them again). The device costs me 30 euros per month, for 2 years, which comes out to 720 euros at the end. That's actually cheaper than the normal resale price of ~870 (average according to Tweakers).

    Actually thinking about it now, I wonder what the catch is. That kinda seems too good to be true.

  • I have experienced the delayed scrolling, mostly on cheaper phones.

    But that's mostly because i'm used to phones having 120+hz screens now, going back to a 60hz screen does feel a bit sluggish, which is especially noticeable on a phone where you're physically touching the thing. I think it might also have something to do with the cheaper touch matrixes, which may have a lower polling rate as well.