

Road Runner and Wile E Coyote was my favorite. It was somewhat rare in amongst all the WB morning cartoons. The rare one I always looked out for and almost never saw: Catch the Pidgeon (Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines)
Road Runner and Wile E Coyote was my favorite. It was somewhat rare in amongst all the WB morning cartoons. The rare one I always looked out for and almost never saw: Catch the Pidgeon (Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines)
Maybe Gitolite if it’s for code?
This is a fair point, though I will say for most Paradox games the majority of the changes come out in free updates when the DLCs drop. And I’ve found (coming from Europa Universalis IV) that there are only a few crucial DLCs that really feel necessary to the experience, many just add cosmetics or minor changes that get balanced out with free updates anyway.
Doesn’t solve the problem, you still feel like you’re missing out, but for example EUIV has like 20 DLCs, only 5 or so I would consider mandatory, and they go on sale in packs so often I don’t think I’ve paid more than $50 for the full game and all necessary DLCs for any paradox game.
Apparently this happened during Grandma’s Boy https://youtu.be/NMZv7ut_Zzk
I have several vintage film cameras I use pretty often, oldest are probably my Nikon F or Leica M3 from the late 50s.
I did a burpee and when jumping my feet back in towards my hands, they went too far and i kicked my own wrist. My toenail took a chunk of skin out of my wrist. So dumb.
The Z-Trip remix of I Want You Back, which is more of a demix than a remix or cover. It strips away a lot of the production and emphasizes the subtle guitar riff really nicely
I would configure a Backblaze B2 bucket and copy your repos and configs there, should be dirt cheap compared to a VPS and very durable.
I’m probably preaching to the choir, but Arcane, Scavengers Reign, and Nimona all check those boxes, and are all well worth watching.
For so many Linux server packages I find the manual to be more of a reference than a guide, so not very useful if you’re just getting started and aren’t sure what to do, but Shorewall is an exception, its manual is wonderful and Tom the creator really goes into detail about how to fit it into many different setups.
https://shorewall.org/GettingStarted.html
You’ll probably want to follow the two interface guide, the two interfaces in your case are your public IP interface, and the virtual interface connected to the Podman network side. You’ll essentially treat shorewall as a firewall/router for your Podman containers which will act as your “LAN” in this case. The warning about not installing Shorewall on a remote system is not to be ignored, you’re generally fine to install the package, but do not start the shorewall service without first setting up some rules to allow SSH. The safest way is to log in via your VPS console instead of SSH to keep you from getting locked out. Most VPS providers have some sort of out-of-band connection utility like VNC or a simple console access you’ll want to use.
If you really want to stick to UFW, you can ignore me, but this looks like a situation where finding another firewall may be best. UFW is a front end for IPtables and is mostly meant for desktop or simple server app usage. I’d recommend Shorewall, which is also a front end for IPtables but implements a zone based firewall and allows for more complex setups to be handled easier than with UFW. You can put your podman containers into a zone and define all of the network access you need for that zone separate from the host system.
aw I miss vine. amazing what could be done in seven seconds, out of the endless sea of stupidity we occasionally got absolute gold like the maracas guy, watermelone, and free shevacadoo…good times lol
Nikon F. Not the most collectible film camera, but i’ve got the eye level prism, and it’s in flawless condition after a good CLA. Use it pretty regularly, it has half a roll of Ektar still left to shoot in it at the moment.
Glad to see Tröeg’s in that list! Their Perpetual IPA has been my favorite beer for years.
Mad awesome shot!
I found a way to use my old Nikon as a webcam using an HDMI capture card. Hooked it up to the camera’s mini HDMI port and wham! had a working webcam!
But after thirty minutes, it would always switch off the live view, so i was left with a camera feed of the menus. Turns out this is an import restriction so it can be imported as a “still camera” and not a “movie camera” for significantly less taxes.
Enter some wonderful soul who found a way to hack the firmware to allow live view to stay on continuously, so now it works great as a webcam!
For my simple needs (mortgage, 401k, couple different IRAs, and a managed investment account) it did great.
Nice! Really like the film-centric considerations in your design!