

This was a really good read, I love how the author explains the whole story from the start and how it all started from a bit of tinkering with the hardware just for fun and grew into something bigger.
openpgp4fpr:2a420f2982e589326ca49d1b0644b87ed144c988


This was a really good read, I love how the author explains the whole story from the start and how it all started from a bit of tinkering with the hardware just for fun and grew into something bigger.
We need jungle I’m afraid
Yeah, didn’t catch your sarcasm there :D
For functions that want to accept variadic arguments in C/Cpp
Installed it out of curiosity, filled with adds, regular banner and full screen ones. Looking at the contents briefly, not sure what value it really brings.
Edit: sorry that’s not really and answer to the OP question, just wanted to warn others
GitLab LFS storage is mad expensive. I regret buying into it… We have an unreal engine project and the assets cross over 20GB, not raw assets mind you. I’ve self hosted perforce before and should have stuck with that


Mainly use it as a documentation search for APIs I’m not familiar with, or when I’m not sure what options there are to approach a problem. I work with unreal engine a lot, so I’d get a few pointers from an LLM first, then go read the source code of those APIs and inplement the rest myself.
That’s a great analogy, I’m going to try to use it at my place, next time I need to explain tech debt
That sounds like a good alternative for me. I didn’t use lidarr to pull in new releases, mainly to tag and organise the files on disk, I’d mostly import albums manually when I come across something I want. So I wanna drop an album in some import directory, get it tagged with listenbrainz data and placed in the right place. Is that achievable with beets?
I’ve got the same setup and have been waiting for the lidarr cache API to get fixed but it has been taking ages. Are you running beets at the same time as lidarr and how does it compare functionality wise? Would you be able to switch from lidarr or are you planning to go back to it eventually? I realized that having to rely on stability of someone else’s cache server is not ideal.
I’ve been using coolify for in house services and databases at work on our own hardware, it works pretty well, albeit a bit difficult to get the initial setup going. So far it does the job.