Not saying bikes aren't the most dangerous, but comparing against the distance skews this. A plane trip is usually quite a bit longer than any other.
Not sure how else to measure it though, maybe against number of trips traveled?
Not saying bikes aren't the most dangerous, but comparing against the distance skews this. A plane trip is usually quite a bit longer than any other.
Not sure how else to measure it though, maybe against number of trips traveled?
He's cited as an "experienced police officer" in a lot of places. I doubt one would go round the city, the Parliament and bars carrying, let alone while drunk.
The comparison of a carry-on permit to a driver's license is just golden.
Se on aika mielestäni aika merkityksetöntä, saako sen kierrettyä jollakin ja välittääkö IL siitä. Lisäosien käyttäjät ovat varmaankin hyvin pienessä marginaalissa, ja meistä suurin osa tuskin selaa IL:ä muutenkaan. Tuon seurauksena sekin pieni osa ihmisistä, jotka viitsivät kieltää seurannan, luultavasti vain hyväksyvät sen jatkossa.
Ja maailma ottaa taas pienen askeleen taaksepäin yksityisyyden osalta. Toisaalta voi käydä hyvin ja tämä herättelee ihmisiä siihen, kuinka hyvä bisnes tuo kohdennettu mainonta on. Ja sitähän se ei voi olla, jos kyse on täysin harmittomasta jutusta. Ehkä optimismia.
Some months ago, I had UTD issues with Element X too. My hs has been up for some years, and the devs claimed they had done a lot to fix UTDs.
I was about to bring the server down, but as a last resort decided to log out all but one Element web session which was able to decrypt the messages and try resetting the key backup. Haven't had any UTD issues since then.
Maybe worth a try.
Thanks!
I drove on a learner's permit with this for a couple weeks, then took the final driving test on a Kawasaki Z650. The smaller road/sport bikes are definetly more forgiving on slow speeds in the city, but the feeling is just not there.
10/10 would recommend a lighter cruiser like this to start with. Brakes could be a bit stronger, especially when riding 2 up.
I've used one called CIFS Documents Provider in the past, worked very well.
It adds SMB/CIFS as a storage provider like Google Drive or Nextcloud to the Android built in file manager.
Available only from Play Store, AFAIK. And I think I was still on Android 14 last I used it.
If something like Ansible is too much, you could list the packages as a bash array in a file
pkgs=(
vim
bash-completion
...
)
Source the file
source pkgs.txt
Then install them
dnf install ${pkgs[@]}
This expands to dnf install vim bash-completion ...
As for listing the installed packages,
dnf repoquery --userinstalled --queryformat '%{name}\n'
The list includes all packages not installed as dependencies, so it's not quite perfect but might be close enough to what you need.
The array expansion workaround should work for other package managers too, as long as they take the list of packages as whitespace-separated arguments.
FlorisBoard with the Material theme.
Tried many, but FlorisBoard's bugs bug me the least, not that there are many. The one feature I wanted was password manager autofill bar, FlorisBoard worked the best at the time and has been solid since. Material theme is nice too.

I've read a lot of outcry about this wrt self-hosted mail servers.
Some say this is fatal, some say it has no effect. Both sides seem to have valid technical arguments. It would be nice to understand the effects better.
My biased opinion is that most people run Nextcloud on an underpowered platform, and/or they install and enable every possible addon. Many also skip some important configurations.
If you run NC on a bit more powerful machine, like a used USFF PC, with a good link to it, the experience is better than e.g. OneDrive.
Another thing is, people say "Nextcloud does too much", but a default installation really doesn't do much more than files. If you add every imaginable app, sure it slows down and gets buggy. Disable everything you don't need, and the experience gets much better. You can disable even the built-in Photos app if you don't need it.
Not saying NC is a speed daemon, but it really is OK. The desktop and mobile clients don't get enough love, that's true.
I'm talking about the "bare metal" installation or the community Apache/FPM container images. AIO seems to be a hot mess, and does just about everything a container shouldn't be doing, but that's just my opinion.
Eikö siitä ole väläytelty, että nettiyhteyksiin pitäisi lisätä kasettiveroa vastaava kustannus? Koska internetissä löytyy tekijänsuojattua materiaalia.
Käytännössä se kai ajaisi saman asian kuin suoraan laitteiden verotus.
Probably going to boil the oceans or starve some natural resource before that... AI can maybe write code like a bad human programmer, but us bad human programmers really don't set the bar that high