nogooduser Now • 100%
I’m the same. I stopped trying to name colours a long time ago.
nogooduser Now • 100%
I am colour blind and the first one was the easiest to see by far. My wife couldn’t make it out even when I showed her where the lines were.
nogooduser Now • 100%
I used to use a custom DNS solution using Amazon Route 53 (which I already used for my websites) and a Let’s Encrypt certificate. It worked ok but was pretty technical to set up.
Then I switched ISP and the new one doesn’t allow incoming connections by default so I use Nabu Casa. It was super simple to set up and works perfectly and, imo, well worth the cost.
nogooduser Now • 100%
There is a red line. The west keeps saying over and over again that they must defend themselves within international law.
The problem is that they either ignore the red line or deny that it was ever crossed.
nogooduser Now • 63%
Well, we wouldn’t want them to run out I guess. /s
nogooduser Now • 100%
That’s what I’m thinking. The homeowner installed it to fake meeting code.
nogooduser Now • 66%
It is stupid, yes, but they wouldn’t be able to do that anyway.
I’m fairly certain that the article is using the wrong term here and the problem is that the name Skywalker is trademarked.
You wouldn’t be able to trademark the name Jane Doe so you wouldn’t be able to prevent someone from using it.
nogooduser Now • 100%
Maybe it’s not changed then because I was using it in the early 2000s. 😀
nogooduser Now • 100%
We used to use Redmine and it was a fantastic piece of software.
nogooduser Now • 100%
You’re right about the glowy baseball bats but I think that Jedi combat is a tough one to pull off well. You can force pull any of the lower enemies into a one shot with the light sabre as it is and there’s no reason that you shouldn’t be able to do that with all human sized enemies that aren’t force users except that it would make for a dull game.
The loot is shit but I don’t know what more a Jedi needs other than armour or blasters but they don’t really use them. It is very weird that I had to find something in a box for me to get the idea to not shave my beard so close.
nogooduser Now • 100%
The one thing that was a misstep on my docker journey was that the original tutorials that I followed installed them using the command line. It’s much better to do it using a docker compose file.
nogooduser Now • 100%
I guess that my message wasn’t clear but by “component” I meant a home automation component.
I have the following containers in my HA installation:
- Home assistant
- Node red
- MQTT
- Zigbee2mqtt
- Esphome
And maybe others that I have forgotten.
Each had to be installed manually by adding it to my docker compose file, mapping drives, and editing config files.
Most, if not all, of them (except HA) can be installed from within HA if you’re using HAOS.
nogooduser Now • 55%
It can also be installed using docker containers but that is more difficult to manage as you have to install every component manually.
nogooduser Now • 100%
Wipeout 2048 was my favourite of all time and is available in the Wipeout Omega Collection. I wouldn’t say that it’s better than the more recent titles but it was just the one that grabbed me.
I also really liked:
- Dirt Rally was ace on the PSVR
- Burnout Paradise
- Need for Speed: Most Wanted (the second one)
nogooduser Now • 100%
It’s purely about the power of advertising. It is the most trusted news channel in the uk with around 70% of the country watching BBC One for their news. The second most popular news channel is ITV at 49%.
So they could launch an appeal without the BBC but they could be missing up to half the population. Although it’s difficult to tell because they could also be missing none of the population if those that don’t watch ITV watch other non-BBC channels.
I think that the concern that they have (regarding the ability to actually deliver aid) is valid. We’ve heard a lot of stories about aid delivery not working so how are the aid agencies going to ensure that they can use the money that they collect from the appeal for the specified purpose?
nogooduser Now • 90%
This story is about French/space/communications/technology. Not American/politics/racist/conspiracy. Not one genre overlap
It’s about the one overlap that you missed out: frickin space lasers
nogooduser Now • 100%
I think that we know the answer to that don’t we?
We’ll keep hold of them in case we need them regardless of the fact that using them now would drastically reduce the chances of us needing them later.
That’s ignoring the humane reason for sharing because that won’t be considered relevant to any decision made.
nogooduser Now • 91%
I’m not sure that’s the fault of XML though.
It’s more the fault of the implementation and documentation.
We have a WCF service with an odd configuration and nobody has been able to integrate with it that didn’t use Microsoft tools. It’s definitely not XML’s fault.
(That service has been replaced with a REST API now)
nogooduser Now • 75%
Well, as we provide Israel with only around 1% of their arms imports I think that we could only ever hope to make a political statement rather than having any real impact.
nogooduser Now • 100%
Same in the UK but we’ve only just done anything about it.
I run HA in Docker and I have set up Mosquito MQTT and Zigbee2mqtt in other containers. I can add Zigbee devices into Zigbee2mqtt and they automatically turn up in the MQTT integration. The problem is that they usually don’t have the control entities in HA. This means that I can’t activate switches by clicking on them in HA. Everything else seems to work. I can turn the devices on and off in Zigbee2mqtt and I can do the same from Node Red (running in another container) with the Zigbee2mqtt plugin. Has anyone else seen this problem? I found something in GitHub about it but the comments said that it was fixed in the next version but I have a later version than that but it’s still not working.
All the news on his speech seems to be about HS2 but I think that this is important too.