

Would you like to play… again?


Would you like to play… again?
Title seems to be have been changed now:
The (successful) end of the kernel Rust experiment


This creamed corn tastes like creamed crap!


They had low refresh rates and horrible motion blur in the early days. It took like 15 years for the situation to improve but have since mostly been surpassed by OLED and other new technologies.


Similarly, I think part of the issue is that people want to believe that life is simple and that the explanations they learned when they were younger are concrete and inviolate. It’s why conservatives are so resentful of “book learning” and novel and counter-intuitive interpretations of phenomena because it challenges their simplistic view of the world which reveals that they have less control and understanding than they thought. Conservatives don’t like that feeling so they lash out.
probably something with my ISP that I can’t really easily work around
I’d try and find out if you’re behind a CG-NAT first, and whether you have IPv6 support. Some ISPs will turn off CG-NAT if you ask if that is the reason you haven’t been able to get things working. Wireguard will then work properly which is a bit kinder on battery life with mobile devices in particular compared to Tailscale and Netbird (although both are improving in that regard).


Susan Collins is furrowing her brow at this very moment.
Maybe a used minipc like the Lenovo Tiny series, although it might be slightly exceeding your budget.


Vodafone/TPG now implements this too. It’s just shitty old Optus that’s stuck in the past.


Yeah, you’re stuck with NAT66 with most commercial VPNs that support IPv6. If you’ve got ISP level ipv6 you can still allow inbound connections directly at least.
If you do go the NAT66 route, consider assigning a fake GUA from an unassigned prefix as if you use standard ULAs outbound connections will always prefer ipv4.
None of this is in the spirit of proper ipv6 but it “works”.


The frogurt contains potassium benzoate.


But the source code carries a terrible curse.
I don’t normally use Jellyfin for music but I do like that some subsonic clients like supersonic are supporting Jellyfin as an alternative, so if navidrome breaks for some reason I can just change over quickly.
Navidrome will only open your library in read-only
Are you sure that’s not just the default in the example docker-compose.yml? If there isn’t some additional handling, you can just remove the “:ro” from:
volumes:
- "/path/to/your/music/folder:/music:ro"


It’s funny how conservatives the world over trot out the same tired conspiracy theories. The conservative parties in Australia have regularly tried out the ‘African gangs’ idea without much success.


This sort of setup is a bit more advanced since it requires static routes on the remote router at least. Doable with one or two networks, but not if you have a bunch of users.


Most ISPs that do use CGNAT also offer ipv6 in Australia at least. The problem is that there is always that one client network that only supports ipv4 so you end up needing to support dual stack one way or another. Most of these ISPs also support CGNAT opt out for free at least, but I suspect that will go away in the medium term (and maybe that will encourage more universal ipv6 rollout).


It’s probably a TOS violation but you can combine it with pinchflat to strip ads and sponsored content from YouTube. It’s not a general YouTube app though, rather you use it to preserve channels you’re interested in.
You can also use Jellyfin to serve legally purchased music from bandcamp etc, or movies and TV shows ripped from Blurays and DVDs.
Buy me Bonestorm or go to hell!