Thats right! I forgot about that part.
Cops are nightmarish levels of stupidity.
Thats right! I forgot about that part.
Cops are nightmarish levels of stupidity.
If I remember right, one cop brought his rifle in which got sucked into the MRI machine.
Even the warrant was based on a cop lying iirc. The basis boiled down to something like “energy use and tinted windows”, which, you know… Medical imaging and patient privacy.
Idiots and asswipes.


Its the only way I roll when it comes to ebooks
Actually its the only thing I’d like to find in an open comic reader for iOS (iPad, my only iOS device, work bought it for me). Panels supports it (paid version), but I have yet to find an open source solution for iOS that does (for comics specifically).
For android quite a few do out of the box. Definitely recommended.
I’d also recommend checking out a server that uses it to try it out. Calibre-server supports it if you want to check it out.


OPDS is the only real hard requirement for me in an eBook reader app.


I’m fine with keeping equipment in the rack if its secured, but I always remove the cabling. I personally don’t think people pay much attention to that part.
I’d also put packing between devices. Since its all going in the uhaul, I wouldn’t personally feel the need to separate anything out of the rack, I’d probably leave it in and just check all my mounts are secure. I’d also make sure the rack is secured well in the uhaul, strapped in with a blanket between it and the wall.


I’d consider Jellyfin if the end user access was more plug and play.
Honestly if it could support multi-server login cleanly, that would be the trick right there.
That said, haven’t had any issues, but I did have to help family set it up the first time.
This is my strategy whenever I learn a new language. Start easy, escalate in complexity.
Etc.
The basic game itself doesnt matter - make it hangman if you want. The idea is to get used to a language.
Keep doing that sort of thing, experimenting and learning, find ways to break things, find weird ways to solve problems, figure out ways to write even less lines of code. Find elements that you can make a function instead. Sanitize inputs excessively. Whatever.
Play around, and keep playing around. You’ll learn in no time.
For the record, this is how I learn, by doing. I have a really hard time sticking to tutorials, and I find examples far more helpful than a manual entry explanation of what something does. YMMV.