

The “short” ending was a brave choice on the designers parts. Credits roll was awful… Still my favourite ending.
The “short” ending was a brave choice on the designers parts. Credits roll was awful… Still my favourite ending.
This will be a dream for detecting faulty pin connections
I’m running HA on an esxi VM on a gen10 proliant server for the same reasons.
I made the joke because the max spec pi 4 is just reaching breaking point based on testing a recent upgrade on a HA instance I previously had on there.
If the pi 5 copes better that still opens HA up for a generation of new home automators without having to invest a lot of cash or maintain software and hardware for a non-SBC.
I hope this trend doesn’t continue with HA though; it’s getting very resource heavy. It’s my second most resource intensive VM after a windows VM which says a lot…
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Me: can raspberry pis keep up with home assistant system requirements forever?
Pi foundation: hold my beer
Also interested in the answer to this.
The popularity of Harry Styles
That seems extremely unlikely, and almost unheard of. If I wget the page I’m a container, I get the same as in browser, so that would suggest this isn’t the case.
That isn’t happening for me, nor has it ever when I’ve visited DHH’s blog. It’s possible your browser is compromised.
They’re using a third party called deft to manage the hardware. Which is a reasonable middleground between cloud and self-operated, the more I think about it.
I haven’t seen a lot of info on what the cost of that management is though but it’s likely to be leagues less than AWS/GCP
Wrong, it was GodGod
On his first day, he came on to one of the women I worked with very aggressively and shortly after told another to “bring me a cup of tea, quickly” while on the way to a meeting.
He was escorted off the premises by several other members of staff a few hours into the day once all of his system access had been revoked.
I’m sad to say this, because I know what a bad rap this field gets already and I know so many lovely people who are part of it… But, they worked in InfoSec.
I’ve heard it described as “flying spaghetti monster for the religious” because, much like FSM, it’s a useful allegory to frame the point, but not very interesting beyond that.