Although I have my issues with plex, jellyfin has its own problems:
STILL can't clear out the TS transcoded files automatically. So if you watch a bunch of TV episodes on a weekend, your jellyfin container will run out of space and break.
STILL can't handle subtitles properly. I swear, this must be jellyfin's Waterloo.
jellyfin cannot demux 5.1 and present stereo sound on certain streams. I think this is a tooling issue. But it's low level enough that I can handle it manually with mkvtoolnix myself on the few cases it happens.
Flashing the phone's bootloader and image is still done with adb and fastboot, but unlocking the bootloader is by now pretty much done with tools only made for windows.
Mostly this is because the exploits use factory flashing tools provided by manufacturers, which are nearly always windows.
These projects are poorly maintained and abandoned because the industry of email has been reduced to a very few players, and they don't care about IMAP standards, dmarc, dkim or any of it.
You're running head on into the primary reason no one self-hosts email anymore; it has gone from being a nuisance to being adversarial.
I just snapshot the parent lxc. The data itself isn't part of the container at any level, so if I bung up compose yml or env, I can just flip it back. The only real benefit is that all my backups are in the same place in the same format.
Like I'm not actually opposed to managing docker in one unit, I just haven't got there yet and this has worked so far.
If I were to move to a single platform for several docker, what would you suggest? For admin and backups?
I use individual lxc for each docker compose so I don't have to revert 8 services at once if I need to restore.
I would also argue that an alpine lxc runs in 22mb ram by itself ... Significantly smaller footprint on disk and in memory. But most importantly, lxc can actually share memory space effectively, one doesn't need to reserve blocks of ram.
The issue is that they are pushing their own version of flatpaks, some of which are broken, instead of contributing to flat hub and making that the default.
Well, tbf Brodie had only just covered that Hector had left upstream.
Also, it's hot on the heels of one of leads of the nouveau driver leaving redhat and the nouveau project altogether. Karol Herbst has pointed out friction with Linux kernel maintainers as well.
There are a number of other devs who are less... Shall we say set in their ways and are perceived as completely opposite to the free and open values they once encouraged 20 years ago. And i don't think anyone wants to see the Linux community fragment along these lines.
Sorry to pester you, but I'm confused: my google calendar app does not allow removing the original google calendar. How were you able to do so?
And both of your installs can sync from device to NC? I have not been able to get around this... Only one-way sync from NC to davx to 3rd party android calendar.
Yeah, those are both good examples of interdependent supply between us and Canada, where it makes sense to keep markets geographically together.
I'm more referring to artificial blocks in terms of provincial barriers put in place for political reasons, like my alcohol example. Historically, these were restrictions for tax reasons between Ontario, Quebec and western Canada, but recent (last 20 years) spats and competition for transfer payments have essentially cut off lumber, paint, car parts, raw minerals, etc between provinces as close as sask and Manitoba.
And that is on top of intangible services gradually being restricted more and more between provinces. As a remote worker and contractor, rules have tightened for me about working in multiple provinces simultaneously.
These measures aren't there to balance economics, they exist because provinces compete more than they cooperate.
No, there are significant regulatory barriers between provinces.
Alberta has hard limits on how much BC wine and produce can be sold in stores. Consequently, its cheaper to get Australian wine in Calgary than from the okanagan valley. Same with fruit, but from the USA.
Although I have my issues with plex, jellyfin has its own problems: