![](https://lemmy.sdf.org/pictrs/image/1ca3dbd4-1213-4937-b80d-5ea3482c5443.png)
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Decided to buy another drive instead of doing any more harm than I needed to, no worries
helpimnotdrowning.net (eternally unfinished)
Decided to buy another drive instead of doing any more harm than I needed to, no worries
unfortunately I was, lol
I’ve already bought another drive to avoid this funky shuffling, so I should be fine now
What’s the advantage in btrfs over ext4? I’ve kept hearing about it since I started with Linux but the only advantage I can see with it is the snapshot rollback feature, which while useful looking, I don’t think would be something I would use
Yep, I’ve just ordered another 8tb to copy to and avoid the headache that could be a drive failure. And it’ll certainly be faster, gparted is still giving a 13 hour ETA for the first resize! Thanks for the help!
The docs say jellyfin-ffmpeg is only needed on Debian distros, like Debian itself or Ubuntu, other distros like Fedora should be able to use their respective ffmpeg packages. https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/installation/linux#ffmpeg-installation
Is there a reason you can’t have root on your VPS? Maybe you could ask to have Jellyfin and ffmpeg installed by an admin?
If your willing to try it, you could unpack the .deb file with dpkg -x <jellyfin-ffmpeg-for-your-distro.deb> <unpack dir>
and stick the resulting directory (directories?) in Jellyfin’s PATH, but I’ve never tried this myself and I don’t know how well this could work.
due to the way the Fediverse works (servers hosted on many different machines rather than one large machine), text search isn’t (officially) possible. on Mastodon you have the option of searching by hashtags, but I don’t think that works on Lemmy.
you would have to use an external search engine like DuckDuckGo, Google or something like https://www.search-lemmy.com/
I don’t think sites can request attestation yet, for vpn ips it’s usually that the ip/ip block has shown “suspicious” behavior & got reported either manually or picked up by bot sensors.
(Now of course it’s also bad to let Google and friends be the arbitrator of good and bad IPs, famous for the destruction of truly self-hosted email (among other things))
Basically, the idea is that a server can refuse to serve you (or degrade your experience with captchas/heavier restrictions) unless you (your device) complete a “challenge”. This could be something like the browser (through a system API) checking some device details like
etc. Basically making sure the “environment” is clean and not tampered with (trusted).
The problem is with what defines a “trusted” environment. It could start at just making sure the device isn’t rooted (like Android’s Safetynet/Play Integrity check; most people don’t root their device & don’t/won’t care, also easily justifiable since it can be a security vulnerability because the device is “wide open”).
Then, like the article mentions, the device makers (Google (phones, chromebooks), Microsoft (Windows, Xbox), Apple (macOS, iOS, visionOS, etc), Meta/Facebook (Oculus), etc) could change their terms for attestation and deny approval on stricter, potentially anti-consumer criteria such as device age (forcing you to buy more things).
Not to defend musk, but it’s not from one specific font. The logo is just Unicode char 1D54F, a blackboard bold X/“MATHEMATICAL DOUBLE-STRUCK CAPITAL X”
Maybe they were in need of only the highest-quality release covers that only you seem to possess?
I always like going through my uploaded tab to peek at what people are downloading.
It’s usually music, but sometimes I’ll see someone download some random obscure youtube archive from a dead or retired channel and I’ll be glad to have served that for them.
*.c files are C source files, you can’t run these directly. Run the makefile with
sudo make
orsudo make install
(assuming you havemake
installed) to build (or build and install) the driver.edit: Oops didn’t read far enough into your post, you’ve already tried
make
. What error does it give you?