All of this user’s content is licensed under CC BY 4.0
RISC-V is just an instruction set – same idea as x86. While it is, of course, important to also have an open instuction set, that is somewhat separate from this post’s intention. I am referring to the physical manufacture of semiconductors, RISC-V, or otherwise.
I have little to comment on regarding the motivation for your post – I am not up to date with what's happening in the EU – but, for an encrypted messaging-app alternative to Signal, I can recommend Matrix.
Borg good
Perhaps the next emergent entity is not corporeal, but, instead, of the collective. A good example could be similar to what @kozy138@lemm.ee stated about how the movements of people in crowds are, on the “microscopic” scale, seemingly random, and unpredictable, but, on the “macroscopic” scale, can be predicted quite accurately. One could look at economies, traffic flow, entire nations, etc. as emergent entities that rely on our individual, autonomous interaction. A very interesting such example is outlined in this paper which explains how “Online communities featuring ‘anti-X’ hate and extremism” can be accurately modeled using “novel generalization of nonlinear fluid physics”.
I have found that instances that do seem to modify the source code just use the existing “Code” link and simply point it to their own repo instead.
I personally think that the simplest solution would be to put the STEP files (don’t share STLs, as converting to them is lossy) in a git repo (You could, of course, also format the repo with pictures, a descriptive README, etc.). You would then have a myriad of ways to host that repo i.e. Gitea/Forgejo, Gtihub, Gitlab, etc.
As a side note, it is also very helpful if you include the CAD project files. For example, you could add a FreeCAD project file to the same repo; however, if you do share the project files, do note that it’s also very helpful to include the CAD software’s version information for future compatibilty reasons.
I use Nextcloud’s Calendar to sync to other calendar apps over CalDAV.
occ files:scan --all (or something like that)
I have already done this, as was mentioned in the post.
I enabled that in /var/snap/nextcloud/current/nextcloud/config/config.php
with 'filesystem_check_changes' => 1,
, but it did not fix the issue. It did seem to remove one error that was popping up, but I am still getting a prompt stating that the file could not be created (which is strange because, when I did a file scan, it shows that they were created), and the files are still not displayed.
It should also be noted that I restart nextcloud after applying the changes with # snap restart nextcloud
.
Tried this. Still nothing.
for example to 777 as a temporary solution
Just tried this, and still nothing.
chmod -R 777 data-directory
Does your network not support UPnP? You shouldn’t normally need to port forward in order to seed a torrent, unless your network prevents NAT traversal.