

Very cool, I was just recently looking for a new client since I was beginning to think this one was abandoned


Very cool, I was just recently looking for a new client since I was beginning to think this one was abandoned


Haven’t played Silksong yet, but its release did get me to play Hollow Knight which had been sitting in my library forever.
I’ve gotten partway through Expedition 33, but decided to take a break after spending ~20 hours on act 1 alone (speaking of, I think it’s about time to get back on that soon).
As much as I like single player games, I imagine the most significant amount of my time by far has probably been spent on multiplayer games like cod


I run vaultwarden local only and use https, mostly because vaultwarden doesn’t allow itself to be run over http. The way I did it was to get a domain (you can buy one if you want, I used duckdns for a free one) and when prompted for an IP to point it to, use your server’s internal IP instead your public IP. Other than that you should be able to follow all the guides as normal
Haven’t used KeePass so can’t give a direct comparison, but to answer your question, yes as long as you don’t log out of your client bitwarden will keep a local copy until it can be synced


It was absolutely insane that they decided to do it this way in the first place. It wasn’t perfect before, but at least having multiple teams on rotation gave them some time to cook their own game.
But now Treyarch had to help with vanguard zombies (and also mw zombies I think?) while developing their own game, while also developing their own game for the next year
I’ve enjoyed playing cod since I was a kid but this shit has been a clown fest for years now
Luckily, at least in my experience, most of those are just a .mkv that you can either rename or delete and the game will just skip it entirely. Unfortunately that can’t be done on consoles
I would recommend grabbing a third party controller since for some reason ($$$), none of the big three consoles make first party controllers with hall effect sticks. Search on Amazon for “Xbox hall effect controller” and 99% of the results will work fine. Off the top of my head, I know 8BitDo and GameSir are reputable brands


I so love the DS and 3DS and want these new devices like the Thor to succeed, but the one thing I would see them improve before being called true successors is stylus compatibility.
I don’t know how touchscreen tech works, but the plastic tipped stylus for the DS just feels so much better than the rubber tipped ones meant for modern screens


I’m assuming he means pirating while using the service of a large or small ISP


Fh5 was released on PlayStation this year. It was released on Xbox like 4 or 5 years ago


For the purposes of this explanation sonarr and radarr are the same, but keep in mind that sonarr only does tv shows and radarr only does movies
You tell sonarr what you want to watch --> sonarr tells prowlarr what you want to watch --> prowlarr will search websites for magnet links to your show (you have to specify which websites) --> prowlarr will give the download manager (qbittorrent, etc) the magnet link and it will download it --> sonarr will take the downloaded file and copy it somewhere else for organizational purposes --> media server (jellyfin) will see the copied file and download associated metadata (thumbnail, episode name, episode number, etc) and allow you to watch it
The only programs you need for a purely functional arr stack are sonarr/radarr, prowlarr, qbittorrent, and jellyfin, or any other media server. Anything else is purely icing on the cake


I just bought the game and started playing this weekend. I’m still pretty early so I assume it’ll get harder later, but the combat is already a lot more fun than I thought it would be when I read the description. And the Victorian french vibes are immaculate.
I can see why people love this game so much


Doesn’t proton’s e2ee only work if you’re emailing with another proton user?
I would be happy to accept money, but I’m with everyone else here, just ask your questions and you’ll get answers.
But before you even get started, I have a question for you since it’s not indicated anywhere in your post. What do you want to self host? Do you want a media server (jellyfin)? Cloud storage? A federated service like Lemmy? Do you want to share these services with people outside of your home? Whatever knowledge gaps you want filled are going to depend on this.
I will say that a decent step 0 is finding a computer that you can put Linux on. It can be an old laptop that’s gathering dust, or, if you’re just trying to dip your toes and get a feel for it, you can try using a VM or WSL on your main computer (I’m assuming you have a computer with windows)