

They do some crawling themselves, but Archive Team (a third party group) does a lot of web archiving as well.
They do some crawling themselves, but Archive Team (a third party group) does a lot of web archiving as well.
My most frequent use case of the IA in general is the Cover Art Archive, and I frequently upload cover art for albums to the CAA via MusicBrainz. That’s how I discovered the IA was down, when an upload failed.
What makes either of those decentralized?
There are only 2 current audio frameworks, right? PipeWire (most current, best compatibility from what I’ve seen) and PulseAudio (dominant for a long time but now being replaced by PipeWire)
I dubno, luddites like me aren’t impressed at it. We’re rolling our eyes at it.
That’s my understanding
They didn’t kill it where it was already running though.
Source: this comment posted through Google Fiber
Mercedes and BMW IIRC
Where’s “directory full of FLACs bought from Bandcamp and ripped from CDs”?
On Debian Testing or Unstable you don’t have to worry about that as much. Right now, I have rustc 1.80.1 from the Testing repo, just one version behind.
Remember when a halfway decent motherboard from a reputable make was $100? Pepperidge Farm remembers.
ChatGPT, a notoriously reliable source
Facebook and Google profile you with no account. Accounts aren’t required for tracking.
Would GrapheneOS with default settings be immune since 2G is disabled and networks don’t have 3G anymore?
Well, I’ll tell you that I prefer systemd because I can comprehend its declarative unit files and dependency-based system a lot better than the shell script DSLs and runlevels that I’ve had to mess with in other init systems. systemctl status
has a quite nice output that can be really handy when debugging units. I like being able to pull up logs for just about any service on my system with a simple journalctl
command instead of researching where the log file is.
Modern BMWs auto-level, so they don’t need manual adjustment.
The real world benefit is that scrolling is smooth, not choppy.
I try my hand at packaging it for my distro.
Books will teach the essentials: my core UNIX knowledge comes from an SVR4 book I read in the late 2000s (a decade or more after it was relevant) and it’s still applicable today