![](/static/253f0d9/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://fry.gs/pictrs/image/c6832070-8625-4688-b9e5-5d519541e092.png)
That movie was ahead of its time in so many ways
That movie was ahead of its time in so many ways
I doubt it; rufus is a windows only program
Very American Mcgee
Yes, iirc in Openwrt the default rules allow all traffic between vlans
It’s worth noting that you will have to set up firewall rules on your new router to block internet access to specific vlans. By default your router will probably allow all traffic between all vlans.
If you want to segregate the video doorbell it works the other way around, allow internet access to that vlan and block access to your main vlan.
That’s pretty hipster
That’s arrivals
Excellent comparison, I wonder why they’ve released v3 so soon after this
Jellyfin has ebook support and allows you to download them for offline reading, which I reccommend because the ebook viewer is very basic
Are you able to change the ip address of your current router?
Biblically accurate angel
As far as I’m aware this is only for the cli version of ffmpeg and won’t affect the threading of codecs many of which were already multithreaded.
Running on cpu will give you better quality and (maybe) smaller output file size, but will take longer.
Everything’s a compromise and it all depends on what matters more to you
The most convenient way is with a browser extension that changes your user agent. You can also change it in the developer options of most browsers.
It’s bizarre how blatent this is. Google has so much power over web standards that Mozilla have to work really hard to make firefox work, but YouTube don’t bother being subtle or clever and just write ‘if Firefox, get stuffed’ in plain text for everyone to see.
always glad to see patches, looks like some nice ui tweaks and some squashed bugs
I know, and I agree that it is a pain, however this sort of thing really doesn’t belong in the kernel for most use cases
Or your distro could just have samba installed by default.
I’m not aware of any laptop docks with built in graphics. Normally the video outputs just expose whatever display output capabilities the laptop has through the thunderbolt protocol (displayport over usb c)
This sounds like a job for a raspberry pi 5 with an m.2 hat for storage, software is a less important choice here, so ubuntu’s raspberry pi flavour would be my choice. Just make sure you give it power in a form it likes.