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Posts
4
Comments
109
Joined
2 yr. ago

Boof

  • You can get Let's Encrypt certificates for DuckDNS, so you don't even need to own anything.

  • Works with anything that can open ports. DuckDNS works by pinging their service from anywhere to update the target IP for the subdomain.

  • You do realize all this is easily done with a reverse proxy + DuckDNS?

  • I wash mine when it starts growing mold. So anywhere from every 3 years to every 6 years.

  • Imo this is why big projects that are borderline like this should use github alternatives, preferably self hosted solutions. This was always going to happen.

  • What we need isn't browsers. What we need is an universal way to write extensions cross-browser.

    Browsers themselves are easy to make. The problem is convincing extension devs to work with yet another codebase.

    E: Think of it this way. There's a lot of open source browsers out there.

    Are you using any of them? Probably not.

    Would you use one if it doesn't have for example Bitwarden, Ublock Origin, Sponsorblock, and such mandatory extensions?

    Users follow extensions and ease of use; not what's good for them.

    E2: A good project would be a builder extension for VSC for example, which compiles to all supported browsers.

    Browser devs would then contribute to said extension via native-made plugins.

    Cooperation of two fronts.

  • Could you elaborate a bit?

    Isn't Proxmox etc. "Gpu less", as they only use tty instead of anything like a WM or DE?

    I'd prefer a "master" / hypervisor running a bunch of VM's for different purposes.

    Whether they be for gaming, pirating, development, pen testing, home automation, porn, or anything else really.

    'Course I'd only be running gpu passthrough into a single VM at a time, can't split a single GPU into 50 passthroughs yet.

  • iGPU shares one monitor with the dGPU, but on different protocol, which from what I read online is supported.

    It only really needs output when I flick it open.

    So maybe it needs a KVM switch instead of trusting the monitors splits.

  • How would hooking up everything to the GPU be beneficial when it comes to GPU passthrough?

    Albeit is it even necessary these days.

  • You can disable it explicitly, yes.

    It should be possible to use it with the dgpu.

    Edit: You can also prioritize using the iGPU over the dGPU in bios. Maybe that'd work, hmm.

  • Sadly not sarcastic. Ideal is Radeon handling the base, and NVIDIA being used in passthrough.

    They just refuse to cooperate.

  • Scenario 1. X11 "works", wayland doesn't. Trying to update NVIDIA drivers leads to boot failure.

    Scenario 2. Wayland works. Only on igpu. Only via HDMI. Only on one monitor.

    Scenario 3. Wayland works on Displayport. Doesn't even recognize second monitor.

    Scenario 4. Everything seems to work. Trying to do GPU passthrough fails.

    Scenario 5. IGPU is hogging displayport, despite being connected via HDMI, thus preventing the DGPU passthrough on either HDMI or DP.

  • Bookmarking this.

  • See, capitalism is good!

    When it's imploding on itself, that is.

  • Protip: "It gets better later" isn't a good way to promote a game.

    It has to be good from the start.

    If it isn't and it can't hook a player, you've just lost a customer, who likely just refunded the game as well.

    Now personally: I like terraria from start to end. It got a bit boring in the middle. I used to not be able to play it at all because /something/ about the game really triggered my migraines. It doesn't anymore, and I can play it.

  • Adding an asterisk on the *this particular thing happened quick.

    I assume it would, but I don't know, OP got the statistics.

    E: OP had a link, it's pretty fast drop.

  • Doubt it, that's usually just a single command on the top level domain. Everything gets kicked out at once.

    Edit: Also, suppo.fi also seemed to be down for a bit, and it's probably in DE hetzner datacenter.

  • I was thinking it's only spam servers, but it might actually just be downtime for hetzner or something.

    Instances do not get banned on lemmy. You can run any kind of an instance.

    That said, part of this could be providers pruning "fake customers", aka spammers, scammers, etc, who "paid" for their servers with stolen CC and SSN.

    Edit: Someone up to making an uptime map for Lemmy, placing servers on a map based on where they report originating at? This could help seeing if a specific datacenter has downtime.