I’ll second PurelyMail. Easy to set up and they have explainers for all the various settings. I pay $10 a year for “unlimited” domains and mailboxes (some caveats but for minimal mail we won’t hit any limits).
I’ll second PurelyMail. Easy to set up and they have explainers for all the various settings. I pay $10 a year for “unlimited” domains and mailboxes (some caveats but for minimal mail we won’t hit any limits).
I do, that’s why I thought that site was less ad-riddled. I didn’t even get that pop up.
Original article without all the giant ad interruptions.
I like my Sofirn HS40. It only has a few modes but it has USB-C charging, a fixed right angle, and water resistant to 2 meters submersion. Throw the magnetic tailcap on there and you can stick it where you need to.
Radiohead
Hole
Alice In Chains
Soundgarden
Smashing Pumpkins
Nine Inch Nails
Matchbox 20
Pearl Jam
Screaming Trees
The best place to start in my opinion is with the layer model of networking. The modern internet is based on the TCP/IP layer model, that’s a great place to start.
The links in that article under each layer section have more detailed information if you want to go deeper.
Stacher is a great GUI for yt-dlp on Windows and MacOS.
That is a cool option I hadn’t thought of trying.
But they can pull different quality profiles based on your list preferences right? I don’t see why you need one instance for downloading 4k and one for 1080p.
I believe these are “remux” when searching. I don’t think anyone posts an ISO but the remux contains the entire contents of the original disc but in a friendlier format for playback on more diverse hardware (mkv containers for instance instead of the bdmv container).
Can you elaborate on why you’d need two instances of radarr/sonarr running at once?
This is the way. Exactly what I’m doing for my old iPad mini that can’t get any of the new streaming apps. I download some videos and upload them to the iPad with VLC’s web interface. Super easy and then they’re always available, internet or no.
Alabama
Georgia
Kansas
Nebraska
Oklahoma
Texas
It’s swipe to reply.
To save everyone from having to read a far too long piece just to find out what the clickbait-ey title is referring to.
If you have relevant containers (e.g. the *arr stack) then you can bring all of them up with a single docker compose command (or pull fresh versions etc.). If everything is in a single file then you have to manually pull/start/stop each container or else you have to do it to everything at once.
If you can get IKEA where you are the INSPELNING line has Zigbee smart plugs with energy monitoring for only like $12. I believe they have a UK variant as well.