

Thanks. Yeah I watch all of the open signups feeds and Ive got a TL account. I’m trying to get into a Spanish dub tracker but there’s not many
Thanks. Yeah I watch all of the open signups feeds and Ive got a TL account. I’m trying to get into a Spanish dub tracker but there’s not many
Much appreciated but no thank you. Right now I’m specifically trying to get into a tracker for Spanish dubs. Ive got a bunch of English TV/Movie trackers so I’m good on that front.
I appreciate you. To me it seems silly to advocate for piracy and also place some moral line when it comes to buying access to a tracker. In some cases you just want quick access without the whole rigmarole of waiting for an opensignup or having to take a test/application.
It would be cool if I could simply pay the tracker directly to get access. Once I’m there they’ll see I keep a great ratio anyway. Maybe the seedbox angle could achieve that.
Thanks this sounds perfect. Just need to figure out how to get an invite. I hate that they can only be contacted over discord. Ugh
Yes, it will count towards your bandwidth.
I typically don’t get anywhere close to this though.
The few times I did were due to initiating large backups between devices, upwards of 2TB. But I’ve since moved my backup system to a mesh network and haven’t hit bandwidth overages since.
I recommend it every time this question pops up and I’m surprised more people aren’t privy to it:
Rent a VPS as your public gateway. Connect the VPS to your server with a simple wireguard tunnel.
The only thing on the VPS should be a reverse proxy with SSL/TLS pass through.
Send the traffic at the VPS reverse proxy to a reverse proxy on the main server. Configure this proxy to use letsencrypt certs.
The benefit and importance of the SSL pass through reverse proxy, is that it allows all data in transit to remain encrypted until it reaches your physical server. Traditionally, most would suggest the one and only reverse proxy exist on the VPS but all traffic would then be decrypted on the VPS. This could obviously compromise your traffic if the VPS provider snoops or your VPS is compromised.
Cloudflare tunnels decrypt on their hardware as well, which is why I always recommend avoiding their services.
Backblaze deleted my project drive for a multimillion dollar project I was archiving through their desktop sync. It’s largely my fault for not noticing the drive had failed when considering their upfront policy about them deleting your backups after a month of inactivity. Luckily it didn’t have too big of an impact because the most important files were backed up elsewhere. I do wish their desktop app had better warnings about imminent deletions though.
That’s what I was hoping to do but it’s really difficult on Fedora for some reason.
Arch and Ubuntu you can specify the driver version, but the Fedora method is dnf install akmod-nvidia with no other available options (unless you want legacy drivers for really old hardware).
To my further frustration, any amount of searching just leads to a ton of AI generated slop articles.
This is encouraging. Thank you.
SDR is Standard Dynamic Range. This is how most media is viewed and has been viewed for decades, typically in the Rec709 color space. 99% of consumer devices display in SDR.
HDR is a newer technology that expands the dynamic range passed Rec709 color space. It requires an HDR capable screen to display HDR content and most content is not distributed in this format, although this has been changing in the last few years.
I personally find HDR kind of a gimmick, but my point is that HDR != HD. SDR/HDR describe contrast ratios and how many colors are rendered. SD/HD describe resolution.
The chart does show them downgrading the plans from 4K/UHD to HD though.
The wiki entry has a chart which shows all plans have access to HD content. Is the chart wrong or did the contributor confuse SD with SDR?
Either way fuck HBO.
Settle down, partner.
First thing I tried but I think you need to provide it with your YouTube login cookie to download age restricted content.
I use nginx for static websites and TLS passthrough servers.
I use traefik as a reverse proxy for sites with many services and SSO.
Nginx is definitely easier to configure for simple things. But I prefer traefik for more complex setups.
FBI, open up!
Jk. Thank you for your service
Compressed air can spin the fans fast enough to cause damage unfortunately.
Did you use compressed air to clean out the fans?
It’s possible to fry circuitry if you artificially rotate the fans too fast, as this generates an electric field more powerful than the fans and their attached components are rated for.
Probably rare to cause damage with modern computers but an old PC might be more susceptible to this type of damage.
Am I understanding correctly that if users had 2FA, the vulnerability would be prevented from gaining access?
I have trouble finding multi language releases through the usual avenues.