

“Nice dick bro, ever wondered how it would look in a Studio Ghibli movie?”
“Nice dick bro, ever wondered how it would look in a Studio Ghibli movie?”
Isn’t everyone just sick of his bullshit though?
Both cbr and cbz are just compressed archives - R for Rar and Z for Zip. The format has got nothing to do with how the images are displayed in a reader application.
If you want any reader to read a comic frame by frame instead of page by page, you’d have to uncompress the file, then cut out each individual frame and give them sensible names (eg. page_39_frame_03.png or somesuch) and then recompress.
Someone else in the thread mention software that can do this, but it might not always work as expected, when the layout is not straight-forward.
When you can identify the sender entity (a webshop you’ve used or a company you’ve communicated with in some way and possibly have signed up to newsletters from), unsubscribe is normally safe to use. When it’s something you are certain that you didn’t sign up for, then unsubscribe is useless at best and at worst will alert the sender that the address is live.
Great, I can’t wait until I can never use my windows laptop again because it is perpetually installing updates.
mc mirror is a pretty straightforward method of migration. Should work if the other end is S3-compatible.
Don’t question. Just download every game ever made on any platform. Click the link and don’t question.
Turbo Linux in the late 90s. It didn’t go well.
Later I gave Redhat a shot - 5.0 or 5.1, I forget. Stayed with RH and now Fedora.
Is it smurple? Because I’ve seen that, but just that one time.
I use Ansible to deploy a bunch of containers with intradependencies (shared volumes, networks and settings). One of the containers is homemade with the source pulled from codeberg. Variables are kept in a separate file and passwords in an encrypted one and the whole thing is in a private repo. It is quite flexible.
When I started out converting from compose, I literally asked Copilot for “this, but in Ansible”, which got me pretty far.
history | grep whatever
is quite useful when you just barely remember a command or the files you used it on.
Obsidian looks interesting.
Thanks for the suggestion, but it seems like the challenges with Komga would be similar to those when using Mylar. I’ll probably just go for a spreadsheet.
That was my first idea too, but last I checked it didn’t scrape much other than English editions (using Comicvine AFAIR) and had no way of manually adding stuff it can’t scrape.
Scraping metadata. Wish/purchase/pull lists. Keeping track of multiple editions. Perhaps even scraping entire collections/storylines into manageable lists?
At the very least a quick way to use my phone to check if I already have a specific comic when I’m at the store.
Grist might be useful if I end up setting more than a spreadsheet up, thanks.
Thanks for the suggestion. I think that might be too much work for my needs though.
Then it does nothing.
It sources (includes) any file found in ~/.bashrc.d/ so check that directory.
That could be any city builder once I realize how bad I am at planning.