gibbedygook

joined 1 year ago
[–] gibbedygook 13 points 10 months ago
[–] gibbedygook 5 points 11 months ago (2 children)

i wonder why this works.

[–] gibbedygook 1 points 1 year ago

That's amazing, thanks! I know mine can probably run Jellyfin locally, but I'm hoping it'll allow for 1-2 streams remotely. Probably won't be able to do 2 simultaneous transcodes but direct streams might work

[–] gibbedygook 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

If you don't mind, which processor do you have? I've been thinking of setting up a Jellyfin server too, but I have a G4500 and I've always been worried that it can't handle the load...

 

The IDF and Shin Bet released on Saturday afternoon footage from investigations of two terrorists who infiltrated Israel on October 7 and provided further evidence of Hamas operatives using hospitals in the Gaza Strip to shield themselves from IDF strikes.

During his interrogation, Amer Abu Awash, a member of Hamas's elite Nukhba force, was asked about the connection between hospitals in Gaza and the Palestinian enclave's vast system of subterranean tunnels, to which he responded, “most of them are hidden in the hospitals. (At) Shifa for example (the hospital), there are underground levels… Shifa is not small, it is a big place that can be used to hide things."

Abu Awash is then asked by the interrogator about why Hamas was using medical institutions, such as hospitals and clinics, for protection, to which he answered, “you won’t strike them.” He explains that Hamas is taking advantage of the fact that Israel won’t strike hospitals to smuggle “explosives, weapons, food, medical equipment” for their operatives. “I told you, Shifa is a safe place, it will not be struck. To them it is safe, that’s what we know.” Abu Awash also expressed criticism of Hamas when asked about the fuel situation in Gaza. "First, they take care of their own cars and jeeps and then distribute them to the people. They refuel from full containers for themselves," he said.

When questioned if Gazans have freedom of movement, he responded, "No. You can't go to Egypt without their (Hamas) permission." Hassan Zaarab told his interrogator that his a medic for the military wing of the organization, and that during the October 7 attack, he operated in Kibbutz Sufa near the Gaza border. He was then asked about Hamas’s use of hospitals, and replied that “the Shifa hospital, they’re using it, they’re hiding there.”

[–] gibbedygook 69 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Streaming services are becoming increasingly fragmented, prices are increasing admist an inflationary environment, their service sucks.

But hey, online piracy is increasing, what a surprise!

[–] gibbedygook 1 points 1 year ago

Breakups are hard. I broke up with someone after 5+ years, and it took a long time to get over.

The best advice I have is, don't wallow in it and find something else that interests you. Knitting, picking up climbing or cycling as a sport, redecorating your house, anything that gets you actively thinking about something else and spending time in a way that makes you feel fulfilled. Hell, even a new video game or mobile game.

[–] gibbedygook 7 points 1 year ago

some bots are useful, e.g. in the news communities. For AITA, no because you don't get to respond to the actual OP

[–] gibbedygook 17 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That's interesting, I never thought this would be a feature that someone would want.

For desktops, standby totally makes sense. But for a laptop that's meant to be carried around and runs on battery, I'm willing to bet in majority of use-cases, sleeping when closing the lid makes sense for the following reasons:

  1. Closing the lid usually means the user is packing it up and moving the laptop - in which case things like downloads won't be reliable if you're constantly moving out of wifi networks

  2. Again, if the user is moving the laptop, preserving battery life is important.

  3. Some laptops are designed so their airflow works best when open, so heat may be an issue. Not to mention you runt he risk of users putting it in their bag and then the laptop overheating.

Of course its possible to detect when the laptop is plugged in vs not plugged in, but ultimately it just seems like your use-case is in the minority, so there isn't much support for it - anyone who's determined enough will find a way to disable sleep when the lid is closed like you did.

one workaround is to perhaps set the screen to turn off after 5 minutes, and you can keep the laptop plugged in without closing the lid? The screen probably draws the most energy when idle - when you're plugged in I'm willing to bet the energy consumption of a laptop with its screen turned off is pretty minimal.

[–] gibbedygook 21 points 1 year ago (6 children)

next up: office workers swipe in to the office for an hour a day

[–] gibbedygook 44 points 1 year ago (4 children)

let's make the threshold $60 instead of $600

 
 
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