[-] qupada@fedia.io 8 points 1 week ago

"I bought this before Elon went crazy"

No, no you didn't, he was just better at hiding it. But now that you're all caught up, glad to see you're doing the bare minimum.

[-] qupada@fedia.io 4 points 1 month ago

Also he listened to a smart person.

[-] qupada@fedia.io 8 points 1 month ago

Generally, you just need to export the pool with zpool export zfspool1, then import again with zpool import -d /dev/disk/by-id zfspool1.

I believe it should stick after that.

Whether that will apply in its current degrated state I couldn't say.

[-] qupada@fedia.io 5 points 1 month ago

A different perspective: https://i.imgur.com/KUK7Qb9.jpeg

From the 20th or so level of an office building a couple of streets over. Every photo of this seems to be the one from ground level looking up where it looms over you, I feel it is important we have one turning the tables and looking down on it.

[-] qupada@fedia.io 6 points 1 month ago

My cauldron uses an induction stove powered by renewable energy.

Braised in wine, the way they're accustomed to. Attempting to roast the rich doesn't achieve a great result.

[-] qupada@fedia.io 4 points 1 month ago

Surprisingly, no.

I've got both the first-gen Palma, and a Kindle Oasis (2017).

Ignoring anything that's purely a function of the Palma being significantly newer - has a cool-warm light while that model of Kindle is one colour temperature only, and that it has a faster-refreshing e-ink display, etc - it's still often a more pleasant experience.

The Palma is a little heavier (especially vs the Kindle without its case, which is typically how I use it), but because it's narrower much easier to hold. The Oasis does have the physical page turn buttons, but I never found them to be particularly well placed, always required holding it a bit awkwardly.

It's mildly painful for content that doesn't reflow (like PDFs) due to the phone-like 16:9 aspect, but imho for e-books is the superior experience.

[-] qupada@fedia.io 8 points 2 months ago

Only if it's at least a six minute video, in which lighting the candle doesn't begin until at least minute four.

[-] qupada@fedia.io 4 points 2 months ago

I mean, that depends...

[-] qupada@fedia.io 6 points 2 months ago

Can also recomment "Sqwincher" (stupid name aside) products.

https://www.sqwincher.com/products/single-serve-qwik-stik-zero/

As they market primarily to people working in construction / other trades - and are therefore sold at the likes of electrical and safety supply stores - we buy them in bulk for when we're spending weeks installing racks of servers in our datacentre at work.

[-] qupada@fedia.io 9 points 2 months ago

It sounds like you're thinking of LoRa, another 900MHz radio protocol.

LoRa has similar bandwidth to Zigbee (125kbps), and as you say is designed for low-power devices running on battery. I have PIR motion sensors at home which have used only around a third of their battery after 2 years.

Security cameras seems to be a large target market for HaLow though, where you need a couple of megabits at a few hundred metres.

[-] qupada@fedia.io 3 points 3 months ago

My last laptop (owned from 2013-2020) had an NFC reader under the touchpad.

I managed - exactly once - to get my phone to send a file to it using Beam. Did everything exactly as expected; initiated the transfer by NFC and sent the file over Bluetooth.

I could never repeat the experiment. Once, and only once.

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qupada

joined 3 months ago