What was the map used for?
What was the map used for?
Documentation in the Servarr Wiki
That or you’re driving after dark with your lights off 😅
It’s like flashing your lights at oncoming traffic to warn them of a speed trap ahead
I was looking into DIN rails yesterday. Might be a good option to mount several smaller devices.
Gig nursing is different from travel nursing.
Travel nurses are paid much more than staff nurses and often receive travel stipends and housing allowances.
Chaotic neutral response: A line break is just white space.
Most languages use white spaces
This person unicodes
screen
rsync
job to maintain parity between source and destinationrsync
will be running in the background until you kill itYou can reattach the screen whenever you want to check on status, change parameters or kill it
Thanks for sharing! I’m a pure headless Linux user, so I don’t know much about desktop environments
Depending on your file structure, you could probably keep this running all the time so you don’t have to manually intervene in the future
rysnc
might be a faster and more reliable option. It can compress the files for transfer and does checksums after the transfer is complete
I used something like this to transfer 12 TB from offsite to onsite with zero failures
rsync -arvzip --progress /path/to/host /path/to/destination
You can set up a screen
and let this run in the background all the time
In the 2000s and early 2010s, less of your life was lived on a cell phone or smartphone.
For kids now, it’s 100% of their lives. Post-COVID, the majority of social interaction between peers is through a social media app.
That means that close to 100% of kids are on their phones during the school day. If you aren’t, you run the risk of social isolation and FOMO.
Administrators can’t send a kid to detention for using their phone because ALL kids would be in detention every day.
Here’s one article that examines the problem
Lana!
Currently running server3
after some mishaps including a torched OS drive 🫠
What about NetData?
Yo that’s super cool! My nerd brain went straight to a virtual table top map for D&D