

I do value my adblockers very highly, and I blocks ads in the browser, via DNS on my home network, and on my rooted phone too. Every time I access the internet on a device that isn’t mine, I’m blown away with how bad it is.
I am:
@clb92@feddit.dk (MAIN LEMMY PROFILE)
@clb92@mastodon.social (Main Mastodon profile)
@clb92@kbin.social
@clb92@lemmy.world
@clb92@lemmy.ml
And /u/clb92 on Reddit (and many other places)
I do value my adblockers very highly, and I blocks ads in the browser, via DNS on my home network, and on my rooted phone too. Every time I access the internet on a device that isn’t mine, I’m blown away with how bad it is.
There’s still a lot of filament sitting in the Bowden tube between your sensor and the hotend.
Maybe, but I’m using Gluetun’s API too (which is very badly documented), and it seems to me some of the endpoints only work for OpenVPN. But I’ll have to look into it properly.
Well that’s annoying. When using it with Gluetun, I’m not sure I can even use Wireguard there.
It also depends how humid it is where you live.
Dumps with complete page edit history can be downloaded too, as far as I can see, so no need to crawl that.
valid reasons for not wanting the whole database e.g. storage constraints
If you’re training AI models, surely you have a couple TB to spare. It’s not like Wikipedia takes up petabytes or anything.
Yeah, but organized into as many threads as there are issues/PRs, so it’s exactly as daunting as the same list as viewed on GitHub/project/issues (because it is exactly the same content).
Surely, dedicated tools for managing/tracking issues give you better tools for triaging, filtering, planning and such, compared to a mail client…
Why would anyone crawl Wikipedia when you can freely download the complete databases in one go, likely served on a CDN…
But sure, crawlers, go ahead and spend a week doing the same thing in a much more expensive, disruptive and error-prone way…
Awesome and detailed explanation, thanks. I figured they’d be juggling a lot of mails, and I guess it is possible for some people to stay on top of that and keep it all organized with a good mail client, but still… I would get lost so quickly.
Thanks again!
Oh, it’s not actually FOSS, I think, sorry. Disregard this.
Total Commander is what I use. It’s a dual-pane file manager that has support SFTP, WebDAV, SMB and more with the official plugins it has. It sometimes feels a bit dated, but most other file managers I’ve tried felt simplistic and dumb compared to it. It has lots of advanced features too.
I’m probably gonna sound like a noob now, but how does one even properly handle issue tracking, working like that?
What did they use before? GitLab? A hosted solution like GitHub or Codeberg?
Works great for me, thanks.
Added a button on my Stream Deck too, which disables blocking on my two Technitium instances for 5 minutes.
I have it integrated into HomeAssistant so I have a “Disable DNS Blocking” button
I need that. I already have a bunch of physical buttons on my desk, which do things via Home Assistant, so that’d be an obvious one for me to add next.
You can also up your UAC security level, so it requires your password, like most Linux distros do. This can (disregarding bypasses like this one) thwart keystroke injection attacks like that from a USB Rubber Ducky.
Does that get you a list of only the manually installed packages, or also include things that were automatically installed as part of something else?
Nope, never heard of that podcast, sorry.
Snaps are basically the only reason I don’t use Ubuntu.