My CGNAT'ed home PC is the client, and my public-facing Oracle Cloud instance is the server.
I've tried and failed miserably to use the "official" Wireguard container. Once I start reading suggestions to modify iptables outside of Docker, I know I'm in trouble.
That would seem to be price fixing by its very definition. (EDIT: Note that I'm not making any judgment on this class action. The reality of pricing on IsThereAnyDeal would suggest that there is no such rule that prices can't be lower outside of Steam.)
manufacturers and retailers may conspire to sell at a common "retail" price; set a common minimum sales price, where sellers agree not to discount the sales price below the agreed-to minimum price
And the question is irrelevant. Other companies can still benefit from external price fixing.
Steam itself seemingly isn't trying to have a monopoly.
But damned if there isn't a massive, very-loud Internet contingent that desperately wants them to have that monopoly.
If your immediate trigger reaction is seething anger when someone says, "I got a good deal on a game from Epic".... maybe that's not healthy. The "Lord Gaben" meme isn't meant to be taken 100% literally.
It's a pretty decent value when stacked up against RTX 4000 and RX 7000 GPUs.
But we're only a month or two from the next generation of Nvidia & AMD cards.
Those companies could even shit the bed for a second generation in a row on price-to-performance improvements, and the B580 will probably just end up being in-line with those offerings.
I'm just thinking something as simple as the app triggering an event that unlatches a compartment that corresponds to that specific time. "It's 12:00. Open the compartment with all the 12:00 meds." You'd probably have to include multi-day support, too (I fill dad's meds a month at a time in this - https://a.co/d/cRw0e93 )
That same event could do things like trigger a visual or audio alarm, too.
My goal would be to make it as hands-off as possible for him. He already finds ways to "cheat" the daily dispensers he has now.
EDIT: Look up Pyxis or Omnicell Dispensers for examples of unlatching compartments. We use these pretty extensively in hospitals.
EDIT 2: Here's a good example (starting around 2:00) showing how the individual compartments unlatch: https://youtu.be/bPJSbexZNC4?t=120
Pharmacist here, struggling to find a way to keep my dad on schedule with his Parkinson's meds.
Adding an option for webhooks at scheduled dispense times would open up some cool opportunities for nerds like us to create automated dispensing units.
1Gbps symmetrical speeds with unlimited data for $50/mo
God I wish I lived in the 2% or so of the geographic U.S. that had access to service like this. It's $116/mo here for Comcast's 1000/150Mbps service, capped at 1.2TB. Costs an extra $30 to remove that cap.
It's still active -- save the communities that got kneecapped by mods during the revolt (and sadly, most of those are now Discord-based rather than having any appreciable activity here).
The activity there now is a lot... dumber. Like much of the internet, the ratio of real people to braindead bots on Reddit is a lot different than a few years ago.
EDIT: My suggestion probably doesn't work for your use-case, but I'll leave it for anyone else....
I use this to only tunnel the ports I actually need: https://github.com/DigitallyRefined/docker-wireguard-tunnel
My CGNAT'ed home PC is the client, and my public-facing Oracle Cloud instance is the server.
I've tried and failed miserably to use the "official" Wireguard container. Once I start reading suggestions to modify iptables outside of Docker, I know I'm in trouble.