mike901

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 year ago

I agree information shouldn't be behind an invitation, but it does solve 3 important things:

  • Keeps the law out of your hair
  • Seed requirements ensure torrents stay alive
  • Incentivizes strict quality control and uploading new content

I can't tell you the number of times I've downloaded something from a public source and it's been crap quality, or isn't even the thing I wanted to download. Sometimes the file is fine but it takes 3 weeks to download because it has one seeder with a 10kbps upload rate. That's a big "if" on if I can find it at all if it's something more obscure.

Until someone solves those 3 issues in another way, I don't see a better solution.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

What did you switch to? I've tried to give rtorrent a go, but config is a pain and rutorrent craps itself when you have a lot of torrents. rtorrent + flood is the most promising I've tried other than the obnoxious setup but I'm pretty entrenched in deluge and flood was pretty early in development when I tried.

 

Hi all, I have a raised garden bed in the front of my house (south facing). It is set a few feet back under a roof overhang, so it gets basically no rain or sun.

Any ideas for things I can plant there that wouldn't require me to remember to water them more than once or twice a month?

I've gotten a couple suggestions for hostas, but something a bit flashier would be nice.

EDIT: I am in the USA, and referring to USDA zone 7.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Speaking as a player with thousands and thousands of hours in CS... I definitely get why it doesn't appeal to some people. But what you describe about it is exactly why I and so many other people like it. The game changes very little, and pretty much only gives you guns and grenades as weapons, no fancy abilities or anything like most modern titles.

That unchanging-ness and limited toolset means that raw strategy and to a lesser degree reflexes are the only ways to get ahead. With the map designs set in stone, many with decades of refinement and balance adjustments, you get intimately familiar with every door, corner, and corridor. It becomes much more about predicting what the other team will do and strategizing against it, rather than just grappling with the game and mechanics.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'd recommend just going for a new wheel and tire. Harbor Freight or your local equivalent probably has one that will fit with a solid tire under $20 and never having to worry about flats or airing it up is worth it.

There's also a solid chance the tire is really old and doesn't have much life left anyway. By the time you patch it a couple times, you've probably wasted more than $20 of your time.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Having FOSS discussion isn't bad, but there is most definitely a lot of proprietary software in the selfhosted world. Game servers, most network device software, applications like plex, heck, lots of people run windows on their selfhosted infra.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

Effectiveness is pretty much entirely dictated by what filter you choose, assuming you don't mess up building it and leave huge gaps. This guy on youtube made a video showing the effectiveness of different filters: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAJ__E-hIJc

I have one with just some cheapo filters in my workshop. Does a great job of keeping dust out of the air for paint and finish work.