I saw the video. There has to be a way to accomplish that without leaving the possibility of retroactively changing the license in the future.
Thankfully, the plugins that I've looked at are released with an open source license.
I know I will not be putting effort into porting my subscriptions over as long as the license allows them to fuck users over if company ownership changes its mind or if it gets sold.
It seems cool, but even the documentation is locked away behind a link that requires authentication, so it's going to be annoying for anyone to try to make a plugin. I want to make a youtube plugin with sponsorblock, so I reached out to ask how to access the documentation basically when Louis's video went live and have yet to hear a response.
Also, polycentric is going to need some form of moderation because, as it stands, it's chock full of racial slurs and other awful stuff.
A lot of services that I run on my Proxmox host are far easier to set up and maintain as a docker container because that's just how the developer packages them. Proxmox says that Docker in an LXC is no-no, so to reduce the maintenance overhead and to stick to supported builds, I use a bunch of VMs with many running Docker. Jellyfin has install instructions to run directly on Debian, and that works for me, but don't be afraid to run Docker on a Proxmox VM if it will make your life easier.
Injury danger in a crash is roughly proportional to mass as well, and a car is going to be 20x heavier than a bike or more. A fast bike can be a problem, but not nearly as much as a car.
I recently did the same with a mid 2013 macbook air. I installed NixOS because I already have a config for my framework laptop. It took maybe 10 minutes to put together the extra lines of config for the macbook air, then 30 minutes of waiting for everything to install, and now I have two laptops with the exact same software and layout. The macbook air doesn't exactly scream, but it's a lightweight option for bringing to a coffee shop to write that does its job well, and it was just collecting dust before.
Obsidian is the best thing I've been able to find for my use case. I'm able to fudge collaboration for the things I need by using separate files and dataview to combine. As soon as someone comes out with an open source alternative that has plaintext storage, local-first editing, and live collaboration, I'm switching to that.
My first homelab was a synology NAS, and my gaming PC with a DIY linux hypervisor as the main OS, a linux VM for hosting servers, and a Windows/Mac/Linux VM trio (each with GPU passthrough) that I would switch between for my workstation. I lost performance for sure, but it taught me a lot without the need to purchase more hardware.
If you consider it temporary, it's not a bad way to learn.
Many thermostats that have Apple HomeKit integration can be entirely locally controlled through Home Assistant. Ecobee's thermostats fall into this category. I use a Sensi ST55 that I got from my utility company for $1 that works the same way.
I am asking for specifications to be released without patents or have patents signed over to an organization like VESA. Whether it becomes popular or not is another story.
Another great example of why proprietary connectors are stupid as hell. I'm going to be upset when my 2DS XL charger breaks and I can't get an easy replacement.
The data on this is clear: right-on-red encourages too many drivers to not be safe enough, and contributes to pedestrian deaths all the time. No amount of anecdote will change that. It needs to be banned in any place where pedestrians are allowed.
The data is also clear on the effectiveness of interventions on driver behavior, and education and informational campaigns are the worst way to change behavior. Behavioral change comes from changes in the built environment that make undesirable behaviors uncomfortable.
This reminds me of the solar roads stuff from about a decade ago. The blindspots on this project are huge, but the difference between this and the solar roads: the solar roads thing was a Kickstarter with a big marketing campaign, and this looks like a media organization is overplaying a small project, like the recent Verge article about that one dude's cyberdeck project.
I agree that short-term rentals are bad, but having more normal rental units, if there is demand for it, is not a bad thing. It's profitable and desirable for people/companies to buy up houses to rent because the rental demand is not being met and they can charge what they want. "Investor" owned housing is generally not sitting empty, so it's not as much of a drain on housing as its popularity as a punching bag warrants.
It's important that we don't pit people who want to rent and people who want to buy against each other. We just need more housing supply. Period.
Have they switched their servers to FaceIt yet? They said they'll have a version that will work on Linux, but I remain skeptical until it's implemented.
I saw the video. There has to be a way to accomplish that without leaving the possibility of retroactively changing the license in the future.
Thankfully, the plugins that I've looked at are released with an open source license.
I know I will not be putting effort into porting my subscriptions over as long as the license allows them to fuck users over if company ownership changes its mind or if it gets sold.
It seems cool, but even the documentation is locked away behind a link that requires authentication, so it's going to be annoying for anyone to try to make a plugin. I want to make a youtube plugin with sponsorblock, so I reached out to ask how to access the documentation basically when Louis's video went live and have yet to hear a response.
Also, polycentric is going to need some form of moderation because, as it stands, it's chock full of racial slurs and other awful stuff.