Everyone who doesn’t own a gas powered car.
Everyone who doesn’t own a gas powered car.
There are plenty of people for whom this is not a true statement.
I don’t know this for sure but I’m thinking this is happening due to something about how OLED/AMOLED screens work.
You can still find the mind enriching parts if you look. It’s a neutral communication medium at this point, the barriers to entry just don’t really exist anymore. People use it how they will. Dumb people will use it in dumb ways. 50% of people are dumber than the average person. That’s a lot of people.
In Oracle you’d just set up a user that has limited access and give them those credentials. Creating a few views that pulls in the data they want is a bonus.
Oh wow my bad. Seems more recent.
It was like six months ago. The first videos from him that I saw were the ones about Sony Trinitron TVs. That was a few years ago.
On a percentage basis I’ve gotten more downvotes and disagreements on Lemmy than I ever got on Reddit
Oh God I try super hard not to do this at work with phrases like “it’s my understanding that” and “it appears that”. It’s such a cop out on something that I’m supposed to be authoritative about. It’s really tempting though.
During the pandemic the grocery store was always sold out of bread flour and sometimes yeast, and the prices of tropical plants ballooned to 2-3x the usual price, with stores sometimes selling out of inventory as soon as they got it in. Some of this I’m sure can be attributed to supply chain issues but some of it was surely also due to consumer demand.
Yeah
As someone who made bread every week and took care of a lot of plants before the pandemic and is still doing so up to the present day, I’m quite glad everyone went back to “normal” so I don’t have to fucking compete with everyone to do these parts of my life.
I’ve got three cats. You just learn to look down everywhere you go and never walk backwards.
it makes sense but the comic is slightly confusing because I think the character should be smiling in the last frame, as if thinking, hey they didn’t lie, it really doesn’t use cookies
Mine runs as a kubernetes app on my truenas scale NAS.
What is the senior architect doing in the server room, that’s the purview of the networking grunts
The calculations necessary to rebuild a failed drive from parity data stored on the other drives means that for the duration of the time that the array is being rebuilt (aka “resilvered”), you’ll have high activity on the other drives. So during that time there’s an increased chance that a drive that was already on the brink of failure is pushed over the edge. If that happens, your data is gone. Like I said it depends on your risk tolerance. You may not feel like it’s worth it in your situation. I personally only run a raidz1. I accept the risk that entails, just as people who use raidz2 accept the increased risk that entails over raidz3. There’s no limit to the amount of redundancy you can add. The level of redundancy that’s needed is a decision that only you/your organization can make.
I’ve found that people who worry that they have bad handwriting typically have very good, legible handwriting. This is true with a lot of things actually. If you care about it, chances are you’re above average already. It’s only people who don’t care and thus you don’t hear from at all about it who are truly bad at something.