GrappleHat

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 17 points 10 hours ago (2 children)

I set up ProtonVPN on the router for a few months & the family hated it. HATED IT! They were constantly asking me to disable the VPN so they could log in to a site here, or make a credit card payment there. It was a mess.

Eventually I just disabled it on the router & ran my VPN at the device level. Much better now & the family doesn't hate me! :)

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Why are you asking this in a Monero forum? I don't understand the connection.

Also, you're clearly not a native English speaker - so I'm suspicious that you don't live in the US & you're not actually running for office there. So what are you really doing?

 

I've acquired a classic 1977 124 Spider that hasn't seen much action in ~1 decade. I've had it ~1 week & the most important stuff works. I've done a number of small trips around town. Yesterday in the garage I wanted to catalog everything that needs repair by flipping all knobs/switches and marking what's not working. I found that the wipers don't work (but the wiper fluid pump does) and the cabin air/defrost fan doesn't come on, and one of the air levers is locked/frozen. I left the car for a couple of hours and when I returned I thought I could smell plastic burning. I hunted for the smell & found a small electronic component under the hood that seemed like it might be hot, but I wasn't sure. I left the car overnight with the hood up and when I returned I the smell was gone but the battery was dead!

I figured I must have left something on by mistake so I went through all knobs/controls using the owner's manual to make certain that everything off (it was). Then I jumped the car & drove it around for ~20 minutes. Left it in the garage ~1 hour being very careful that the doors were closed, no lights were on, etc. & checked on it to see if the burning smell returned (it hadn't). Left it overnight & in the morning it was dead again!

I don't think that there's anything wrong with the battery or alternator because it had run fine all week with multiple short trips around town. I think it's more likely that an electrical component is shorting somewhere & draining the battery. Perhaps turning knobs & flipping switches pushed an old brittle electrical part over the edge?

My question is: what is the best way to find the malfunctioning electrical component? I was thinking of the following:

  • Jump the car & recharge battery by driving around town

  • Park in the garage and disconnect all fuses

  • Return every ~8 hours and check the battery, if it looks OK then replace a fuse

  • Repeat the above step until the battery dies

Using that approach I can isolate the bad component to the circuit running through that fuse. It's a slow process though, is there a faster or more efficient way to do this? Any other ideas as to root cause? Any thoughts appreciated, thanks!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

Glad you liked it!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago

Console version of dungeon crawl stone soup

[–] [email protected] 45 points 3 weeks ago (10 children)

Using an ad blocker

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 weeks ago

Update for anyone who might be experiencing this issue:

I finally found a workaround "hacky" solution. I exported all of my notes to a backup file on desktop, sent it to my phone, put my phone in airplane mode, imported the backup, deleted all of the duplicate notes which resulted (because the phone was partway synced), turned off airplane mode, synced, then switched to desktop and synced.

In the syncing process a lot of notes were unnecessarily deleted and replaced with exact copies. So it wasn't elegant, but it got the job done. Everything seems to be working now (I think)

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Autumn is always Diablo-season in my family. We'll play a modded Diablo 1 or 2 together. It's tradition!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

I like allsides.com

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Thanks a lot for the help. I tried it all but no luck. I also realized that Fdroid uses a pre-release version of Joplin - so I downgraded to the latest on the GitHub and then repeated all of these tests/suggestions but still no change.

I've reached out to the devs via a GitHub issue. Hope that helps. Thanks again!!!

 

Got a new phone (Pixel 4, DivestOS) & trying to sync my notes via Joplin Cloud. It grabbed older notes ok, but seems to be stuck in an infinite syncing loop & never gets notes from the last ~6 months...

Here's what I've done

  • Downloaded Joplin from F-Droid -> logged in to Joplin Cloud -> Added encryption master password -> synced. Result: old notes are there, new notes are not, infinite sync loop
  • Uninstalled Joplin
  • Reinstalled Joplin from F-Droid -> logged in to Joplin Cloud -> synced (older notes come in, newer notes do not) -> Added encryption master password -> synced. Nothing new arrives but I get an infinite sync loop

My notes are all present on desktop. I don't know what to do next! Advice is greatly appreciated!

Joplin app version

Joplin Mobile 3.1.2 (prod, android)

Client ID: ######### Sync Version: 3 Profile Version: 47 Keychain Supported: No

Revision: 8d8cca06e

Android API level: 33 WebView version: 127.0.6533.103 WebView package: us.spotco.mulch_wv FTS enabled: 1 Hermes enabled: 1

77
Populus (1998) & "god games" (en.m.wikipedia.org)
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Happened on this 1998 game by sheer chance and I'm really digging it! As far as I can tell it was never popular. It's a mixture of an RTS and a "god game" where one unit (your shaman) is very powerful & special (chess analogy: sort of like mixing the central role of the king & with the power of the queen).

Strong "tribal" vibes that were popular in the '90s (think Deep Forest music, the game Riven, etc). Very nostalgic for me as I was a kid at the time. I'm playing the PSX version, looks like the PC version was even better!

Has anyone ever heard of this "Populous" series? I'm curious to try other titles, and to try more in the "god game" genre (a genre I never even knew existed!). Any other "god games" worth checking out?

 

This type of music reminds me of 16-bit-era gaming - but I can't put my finger on on why!

  • Were there specific games which had music like this? (Sonic? Megaman?)
  • Or maybe this music evokes that open "sky level"-type aesthetics which sometimes featured in those games?

Interested to hear whether this reminds anyone of specific titles or levels? Any other thoughts?

 

I'm trying to run a program in wine and getting the error 0024:err:module:import_dll Loading library jmptojava.dll (which is needed by L"C:\\Program Files\\SAS\\JMP\\10\\jmp.exe") failed (error c000007b)

The missing jmptojava.dll file is in the same directory as the executable. Do I need to set a Windows environment variable or something so that it can find it? Any other thoughts?

 

What are your recommended Minetest graphics settings? I've tried the "just turning everything on" approach, and that's fine. But it's a bit superficial. What are the knobs to turn to get a more fun graphical experience? :D

 

I want to sync retroarch save files across devices on my local network using a bash script. Plan is to run the script as a cronjob to keep all machines synced.

This does the trick as a one-off in the terminal: rsync -a /home/localuser/.config/retroarch/states/ [email protected]:/home/remoteuser/.config/retroarch/states/

  • Copies new save files to remote location
  • Updates any save files which were modified

But when I put the same line in a bash script rsync's behavior changes. My bash script looks like this:

#!/usr/bin/env bash
rsync -a /home/localuser/.config/retroarch/states/ [email protected]:/home/remoteuser/.config/retroarch/states/

I call it with bash sync_saves.sh

  • Copies new save files to remote location
  • ~~Updates any save files which were modified~~

Strangely, rsync doesn't update modified files when run as a script. But it's not failing altogether, because it transfers new files OK. What am I missing?

Update: if I do the rsync in the reverse order (remote machine -> local machine) then the bash script works as expected. So my issue exists only when rsync goes local machine -> remote machine. Why would this matter?


Update 2 (Solution): I changed the command to rsync -razu /home/localuser/.config/retroarch/states/ [email protected]:/home/remoteuser/.config/retroarch/states/, but I'm not sure that made any impact. The issue was how I was doing my testing. I was doing touch testfile.txt to change the modification date on a file & then I'd try to transfer it with the bash script & watch the modification date on the downstream machine as confirmation that it moved correctly. Problem is that rsync must be smart & doesn't transfer a file if only the modification date changes. It requires the contents to also change. Whenever I tested this way I would never see the file transfer, but when I changed my testing method to change the contents of the file instead (not just the modification timestamp) then all worked fine!

I feel like a dummy for initially mixing testing methods & coming to the wrong conclusion about what was happening, but happy it's working now & maybe I learned a lesson!

5
submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I've seen it asked (on Reddit) how to play custom background music while playing games on ArkOS. I wanted to share how I do it, in case others want to try it as well. I'm sure these instructions could be modified slightly for other Linux handhelds.

  • Gain terminal access (via SSH or directly on the device)
  • With your device connected to wifi run sudo apt install mpg123 to install the CLI-based music player
  • Transfer your desired music mp3s to a folder on the sd card
    • I use /roms2/Music/
  • Create the file start_music.sh in your ports folder which contains the line nohup mpg123 -z /<path>/<to>/<my>/<music>/<folder>/*.mp3 >/dev/null 2>&1 &
    • For me that line was nohup mpg123 -z /roms2/Music/*.mp3 >/dev/null 2>&1 & and the file was at /roms2/ports/start_music.sh
  • Create the file stop_music.sh in your ports folder which contains the line pkill mpg123
    • For me that file was at /roms2/ports/stop_music.sh
  • Log out of the terminal and restart EmulationStation

Now start_music and stop_music options are available in the 'Ports' section of EmulationStation. Running start_music starts a shuffled playlist of everything you put in that music folder. stop_music stops the music. Of course, you'll want to turn off the native background music in whatever game your playing too :)

EDIT: Updated the nohup line to dump outputs to the null output rather than to file (which could eventually grow to be large).

 

I like text-based games (like from ifdb), but I don't like sitting at attention in front of my computer like I do all day at work. Any ideas for how to play these effectively without being on a computer?

  • I've hacked a Kindle Paperwhite & used an on-screen virtual keyboard to play these games. That worked OK, but the virtual keyboard is very imprecise and frustrating.

  • I've similarly hacked a Kindle 3 (the last model to include a physical keyboard). I hoped the physical keyboard would do the trick. Unfortunately, the key buttons are convex & very stiff - which hurt my fingertips after even short play sessions.

Any other ideas? Or is this a fool's errand?

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