[-] loganb@lemmy.world 1 points 3 weeks ago

I will say I had an extra buggy experience last night too. Out of nine or so missions, we couldn't extract from two of them because no one could enter the pelican. If you did manage to clip into the pelican, you would just hang out in there and never extract.

I can see the justification of the pelican talking off immediately if its damaged. My team makes a conscious effort to consolidate samples and have that player enter the pelican first if it's smoking.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 5 points 3 weeks ago

I've been using fedora on a small intel 6th gen or newer mini pc. I then cook up some custom launch scripts that cause JMP to run at login. I use cockpit and a CMK agent for remote monitoring and management.

I got sick of the lack certificate management on Android TV and how much you need to do to make it reasonably private.

If you are on the latest mesa drivers (hence fedora over a more LTS release), and you install Jellfin Media Player via flatpak, everything should just work with hardware decoding.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 28 points 1 month ago

But you know those repairs will outlive the rest of the pants.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 26 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

https://kiwix.org/en/

You can self-host the kiwix server in docker and grab .zim files for whatever wiki you want to host. Wikipedia is one of those files.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago

I can also vouch that Android Auto works in a work profile.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago

That's most likely the problem. In my experience, nearly all tor exit nodes are flagged as such and captchas are nearly impossible to "pass" when using such an exit node. I would try using a free VPN to test. Try protonvpn without an account and see if you can get past the captcha.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 0 points 2 months ago

Are you using a VPN? It might be that changing your exit IP might help. I've noticed captchas get harder to pass if your on a VPN that has a lot of traffic trying to pass captchas. Probably DDoS protection.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 13 points 2 months ago

It's OK I was literally OMW to be that guy.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago

I would cd into the user folder that you want to add / remove files from and see what the ownership is to begin with and simply replicate ownership to match what's already there.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago

Generally, in my experience, modifying the backing storage for a nextcloud instance is more of a PITA than its worth. I would just mount the webDAV in your file manager. This way the nextcloud db stays in sync with the backing storage.

If you are going to be making direct modifications to the backing storage, check this form post on modifying the nextcloud config to have it look for changes on the filesystem.

As for the permission side of things, run ls -lh in the folder that you want to make changes and see what the user:group is for ownership of the existing files and make sure your new files match. Chmod and chown will be your friends here and chmod has a --reference option that let's you mirror permissions from an existing file, a real time saver.

Hopefully this helps!

[-] loganb@lemmy.world 11 points 3 months ago

IKR?? I feel personally targeted by this... And I'm OK with it.

[-] loganb@lemmy.world -1 points 3 months ago

Thanks! Flatpak-KCM is perfect as I'm thinking I'll move to fedora KDE in a couple days when f40 drops. I'm hoping that the Wayland experience on NVIDIA GPUs will be smoother there than on GNOME.

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loganb

joined 11 months ago