That doesn’t exclude a power issue. A lot of cards will light up and spin up even without enough power, then stop responding once something actually tries to use its capabilities.
That doesn’t exclude a power issue. A lot of cards will light up and spin up even without enough power, then stop responding once something actually tries to use its capabilities.
You did plug in the GPU power cables as described in the manual, right?
Probably through that link in your screenshot that says “logs”. Or directly on the server. Consult the documentation.
If it’s only one guy, and not a bus full, then that’s demonstrative of progress. Go look at the MTA back in the 80s, when whole gangs roved the system. It hasn’t “become uncomfortable”, it’s become more comfortable and safer.
Nitpick: the Geneva conventions apply for all kinds of conflicts, including domestic ones. However, tear gas is allowed for riot control in policing.
The reason it’s banned in war is because if the other side sees you using chemical weapons, they might respond with their own, but the bad ones, like nerve gas. In riot control, that isn’t going to happen.
Safe from what?
Why would you want to spend more time thinking about a dead site?
And if you want to make it fancy, make that a wrapper script that checks the incoming file type. MP3s get transcoded, text files get opened, …
What’s in the logs?
If it’s on the Internet, yes.
Given the state of the Internet, you should keep a healthy level of paranoia. I always recommend exposing as little as possible, and that means using only a VPN and not putting jellyfin itself on the Internet.
Technically yes, but as long as your WAN gateway doesn’t provide a route, clients will only know how to reach your own gateway.
Agreed. Separate device. If your VM or hypervisor dies, or you misconfigure something, you take your Internet down. Not a fun thing to recover from.
You only need one port. WAN to switch, switch to router. The router routes and sends it back to the switch, and the switch to the LAN. Vice versa for outbound traffic. It’s called a router on a stick.
Not recommended if you’re paranoid about security, because a malicious client or particularly malformed inbound traffic could bypass your router. For general use it’s perfectly fine.
Maybe a few in Switzerland. I haven’t seen any news about it specifically.
You don’t have to. You can use cash, checks, crypto, gift cards, and more. It’s only credit cards (and probably almost all debit cards) that go through them.
Keep calling. Tell your friends. It’s already gotten MasterCard’s attention enough to make a statement.
True, but I’m not sure that an extension would have the necessary access to manipulate the browser like that. I don’t think it should. A malicious extension could do horrible things.
How does adding AI help their funding?
Same. But that shouldn’t be a factor in a professional publication.
You say that like this administration gives a shit about the law.