

Yep same. I got an Intel Arc card for transcoding and it plays on anything perfectly now.
Yep same. I got an Intel Arc card for transcoding and it plays on anything perfectly now.
Cast iron is cheap at the second hand store.
Sounds like you have an issue with your PATH for the user you’re sshing as. What does ‘/usr/bin/echo $PATH’ output when run via ssh to your server?
Okay, thank you. A lack of a mobile app isn’t a big deal as I don’t really use the YNAB mobile app to begin with since the browser version works so much better on a computer.
How’s your experience with actual budget been? I’ve been considering it and am currently using YNAB.
Anything endorsed by Dimon is gonna be an automatic no for me.
https://blocklistproject.github.io/Lists/ the Smart TV list under their beta lists.
I loved the glorious 3.5.x days. What a fantastic DE it was then. I compiled 3.5.0 from source when it was released because it was going to take the Fedora guys too long to package.
Pool’s closed.
This is great! The first one was a lot of fun.
I’m pretty sure it was Phoenix before it was Firebird. They had to change away from both names due to naming conflicts from other projects.
I can’t believe they’re up to 40. I remember installing Fedora Core 1 like it was yesterday. Yum (and now dnf) has come a long way. It used to have to individually retrieve metadata files for every available package, rather than using a single compressed index of all the packages available in the repository you were using. It made just getting to the stage where dependencies were calculated take forever.
Turns per roll on one brand, grams per inch for the next, and ounces per half-roll for your third choice.
And the units should be consistent. It drives me nuts when I’m in a store and the unit varies across different sizes of the same product.
Good riddance.
A bad SATA cable will cause this too.
Turn your phone sideways.
To get a better look at Buddy Christ, of course.
I run SELinux on tons of servers at work. We taught our Oracle consultants how to use it. Some software vendors get mad at us because we require it and we always figure out how to make it work and it isn’t all that bad to work with once you’re used to it