Cool story. None of it mattered here.
Cool story. None of it mattered here.
Oh yeah it’s so decentralized. No middle men required, oh no sirree.
Personally I think growth is a tainted metric. For a capitalist enterprise focused on shareholder value it might be worth something (although you could argue that’s what turned the corporate Internet to shit in the first place). Steady ingress and egress of users is fine IMO. We don’t need growth, we just need stability.
Super relaxed, that comes with the territory of not giving a fuck. Also I make good money.
This guy is me. Fuck your job. Take all you can, give nothing back.
Forgiving yourself is difficult. You have grown enough to realize what you did was dumb. Whenever your brain decides to throw a random cringe memory in your face, consciously tell yourself you’re better now and you forgive yourself for your mistakes. It helped me.
Why bother with X? Just do l33t CLI h4xx0rs
The economy.
There’s also compatibility mismatch between certain versions of clients and servers. That almost cost me a bunch of files. Thank RMS I had a local copy through syncthing.
Good bot
Unrelated to the question but can we please drop the Reddit habit of adding “of Lemmy” to the question? You’re asking Lemmy, no need to add it to every question.
No ill will to OP!
I set up double puppeting for Discord on my Matrix server. Works great for text communication so I don’t have to have the client installed on mobile devices. I do still use the native client for voice and video streaming though.
Personally I decided to go the Jellyfin route, but I wanted to stop by and thank you for the effort you put into a great write-up! Bookmarked, maybe I’ll try it out in the future.
Make sure the dir you are mounting to exists. If it doesn’t, create it with:
mkdir /mn
I don’t want to be pedantic in reply to a heartfelt comment but since I believe Richard himself would say this: he advocates for free software which is fundamentally different from open source.
There’s a few ways to go, I have used dd in the past to clone the existing drive out to a disk image on a USB SSD, then installed the new SSD in the system and did the process in reverse (and then used gparted to expand the partitions out to size).
There’s also cloning devices that can do this but I’ve only ever done that with traditional 3.5" and 2.5" disks, not m.2.
Whatever you do, make sure you have a backup of your important data before you make any attempt.
I set this up for production on a factory floor for others to use. It’s nice, works extremely well once set up. Importing and exporting images could be easier.
If it was enough for you to write down then it’s enough to work on not giving a fuck about