Yup, that’s a great one! No ads with adguard’s private DNS either.
Yup, that’s a great one! No ads with adguard’s private DNS either.
I’ve been voice training solo for a while and am always on the lookout for more resources, anecdotes and info in general so I’d definitely be up for it!
My best guess is it’s a play at the usual “all you do in python is import libraries without knowing how they work lololol” dig but yeah, I don’t find it particularly funny either
Pretty much the tl;dr here, yeah 🤣
My understanding is folks tend to gravitate towards that because it’s indeed very close to might’ve and whatnot phonetically. My anecdotal experience as a non-native speaker is we tend to be less affected since we usually tackle speaking and listening more seriously after we’ve already familiarized ourselves enough with writing/reading, grammar and vocab.
So my egg has (very) recently cracked, and I just so happen to have fresh T levels results at hand. Kinda shocked to find I apparently have higher T levels than 95-ish percent of cis men lol, was fully expecting the opposite.
Thank you for sharing both the graph and your story too, that’s cool as heck! :)
Yeah, you’re probably right. I didn’t connect the dots that’s what you’d need here, my bad.
Ah, I see. I’ll check it out!
Yeah, I feel that. I’ve settled on telmate’s but there’s a few things I’ve had to implement as hacky post creation SSH edits on the config files, such as passing through the Intel GPU to my Jellyfin container.
I don’t have much actual experience with it but you can run arbitrary shell commands in at least cloud-init, the others should be able to do the same. Maybe that could work? Definitely better than manually running scripts, at least.
It’s not a feature I’ve used myself but I’m pretty sure you can create Jellyfin playlists and collections spanning different libraries, so that could work if you’re okay with some manual curation
Can’t check rn but there’s some info on the recommended models page iirc
Edit: Yup, right here. NVIDIA GPUs series 10 and up, basically.
Can you share which of the local code completion solutions you’re using? I’ve been looking into spinning up my own.
I use Proxmox, running a mix of regular and NixOS based LXCs. One of those also runs Docker for simpler services.
I just came across this GitHub issue and sure enough, it seems to confirm my theory. Since it doesn’t show on KDE’s media center, it probably doesn’t know to pause it before going to sleep.
I saw at least one person with your exact issue, and a few suggested workarounds but not sure how easy it’d be to apply them to an actual Nix derivation. I’ll keep looking into it. 🤔
Right. I’m a fellow Jellyfin + NixOS user so I’ll try and investigate if I manage to find some time over the next few days. I’ll report back if I find anything of note!
No worries!
The check box for this settings was infact already checked. So maybe if I change what happens when I close the lid, from sleeping to hibernation or something else this could fix this maybe?
Ah, I see. Guess you may as well give that a go. I’m guessing what might be going on here is KDE doesn’t count it as a media player for whatever reason. Are you using Jellyfin in a browser or with the dedicated Jellyfin Media Player app?
Some quick research on my end seems to suggest there’s a setting for that scenario in advanced power settings called “Pause media players when suspending”, I’d try that before anything else
Edit: As for why it happens, assuming it woke up from suspension/hibernation, for the most part programs are going to pick up exactly where they left off unless the system goes out of its way to tell them to perform some action (in this case, pausing). Since your lock screen is pretty much “on top” of the entire running system, so to speak, it results in the behavior you’re experiencing.
I second home-manager, it was my Nix gateway drug and I can’t recommend it enough!
Btw just in case you aren’t aware, the nag can be done away with. I don’t have a link off the top of my head but it’s out there.