

That’s why you install it on someone else’s pc :)
Sorry for scaring developers
Norwegian proot with a taste for shitposting
Deeply sorry for my photoshop creations
Former account at Kbin
aspe:keyoxide.org:JYRRSWIKLZWX366Y4DONCIEYAE
That’s why you install it on someone else’s pc :)
I wouldn’t say my hostnames are very creative, but they all have some kind of backstory.
Main desktop: POwOful
It’s a pretty powerful desktop, so why not call it that :)
Laptop: LenOwO
Can you guess the laptop brand?
Server 1: Shitbox
It’s my first server box I ever built, so it’s underpowered and pretty shitty.
Server 2: Stowage
My proper server with actual data parity, and it’s pretty powerful
Server 3: Jank
This one is another shitmix of hardware with random harddrives in raid 0. I am aware that they’ll die at some point, and all of that data stored on it will be lost, so i use it as temporary storage whenever I need to copy something from one machine to another.
Robot vacuum: suckywucky
Yea…
Shadow legends?
Anything is python if you use it incorrectly enough
If I remember correctly it switches to this logo during christmas
Wait till they see the vlc logo during christmas …
Here’s the free oem app as an msix package as Microsoft removed the store link. link
(yes I did accidentally upload it to the wrong collection, but I don’t think I can change that)
I switched from duckdns about a year ago as it failed to resolve the addresses for my jellyfin server. I ended up buying a domain from cloudflare for 3 years for about $4, and I self-hosted ddns updater to automatically grab the dynamic ip, and set it to a subdomain.
As for your nginx config, I’d imagine you could make 2 separate config files in sites-enabled
that are nearly identical, but listen for different domains.
Something like this:
#config file 1
server {
listen 80;
server_name example_a.com;
location / {
return 301 http://example_c.com$request_uri;
#or use an ip instead of example_c.com
}
}
#config file 2
server {
listen 80;
server_name example_b.com;
location / {
return 301 http://example_c.com$request_uri;
#or use an ip instead of example_c.com
}
}
#Or use "proxy_pass http://example_c.com;" in the location tag instead of "return 301..." if you want to reverse proxy the traffic
As a zoomer myself i do find it funny :3
That’s a neat way of doing it
Idk maybe the sub clocks are static and never change :3
I was mainly thinking of making some recursion hence why all the subclocks mirror the parent clock (for that given hour). Also I called it clock squared because I didn’t think the resolution would be high enough for people to actually notice the 3rd level of clocks.
You might notice that some dials don’t really align with the hours they’re supposed to show. That’s because I had to place a bunch of clocks at varying hours with a viewport rendering the parent clock at an angle that probably made it difficult to spot the errors. I rendered it once and didn’t bother re-rendering it once I saw the errors :)
Hey thanks for reminding me I made a clock squared in blender about 2 years ago
yes there is an error in the image, and no I’m not telling you where it is
Next time change the delivery to a postnord delivery box. Most of then are pretty close to housing, and you can pick it up any time you want
You can add an image to a comment or post like this

Maybe building one yourself might be a good idea. I found someone’s old desktop with an 8th Gen i7, 32gb of ram, mobo and Gtx 1070 gpu on the side of the road while on a road trip. Thing was sitting in the rain and slightly rusted, but when I cleaned off the corrosion, stuffed it full of hdds and set it up with truenas scale it’s been running flawlessly with an uptime of almost a year. Been running like that for about 5 years now with the occasional maintenance.
Test