My wife worked at a rental office for an apartment building and had the same experience.
My wife worked at a rental office for an apartment building and had the same experience.
It’s hard to prove the blanket statement, “there are no good reasons to have a private jet.” But it’s easy to prove, “one overpaid person taking a private jet to commute 1000 miles is frivolous.”
No. As a general rule with all software, you purchase a license to use the software, not the actual software itself. That being said, GOG and Itch.io can’t yank games that you’ve already downloaded. I don’t know if Steam does or not, but it probably can.
Here’s another plug for gitea. It’s lightweight, but still has a nice feature set.
I tried hosting GitLab a number of years back, but it was more resource hungry than my host machine could handle well.
For organizing and searching the files, I’m using paperless-ngx. It’s worked pretty well for these and for scanned documents.
My issue is getting the PDFs without having to spend time every month manually downloading them.
All solutions that integrate with banking sites I’ve ever encountered were nothing more but ugly hacks, IMHO.
Yup. That’s basically what FileThis provided. A maintained set of ugly hacks to pull the files for you automatically :D.
Sounds like a great design direction to me. I’m excited to see how it turns out.
Yeah, I’m wondering the same. Maybe it’s helpful for containerized apps or something?
Anyone else have any insight on this?
Restic using resticprofile to configure and schedule backup runs.
A dot files repo for some basic config and an Ansible repo to stand everything up. This applies to both my Linux and MacOS machines.
All the people taking about their NixOS setups had me thinking of giving that a try, though.
Restic using resticprofile for scheduling and configuring it. I do frequent backups to my NAS and have a second schedule that pushes to Backblaze B2.
+1 for Plex and Plexamp. The Plexamp app works great on Android and Linux. Without that, I don’t think I’d use Plex for music.
Mind sharing your Kubernetes config? I’m living off of a bunch of docker compose config files, and I’d love to make the jump to Kubernetes.
The bigger deal is how many customers will react worse if you engage with them in any way. If that weren’t the case, pointing to the hours, shaking your head, etc, would be reasonable.