You could try Emby. It’s freemium, but the free part doesn’t (or didn’t, last time I used it) require an online account.
You could try Emby. It’s freemium, but the free part doesn’t (or didn’t, last time I used it) require an online account.
Celery responded “If you don’t like it just leaf.”
Yep, if you request the desktop version you don’t get that redirect.
Or just request the desktop version.
Counter argument: sometimes our memory of shows is rosier than reality. Take Looney Tunes, for example. Some of those original episodes made fun of mental illness, PTSD, even suicide.
In other cases a rebooted show is absolutely stellar, like BSG.
A severe lack of imagination.
I used to be a teaching assistant at university, and never sorted by name. But based on my experience I don’t think it’s frustration that accounts for the disparity, it’s that as you see more and more assignments you start getting a feel for common issues and are able to point them out more easily. I would always do two passes because of that to ensure that I normalized the weight of my marking.
To be fair though, the chance that every Lemmy instance goes down at the same time is so much lower than Reddit going down. Sure, my instance might be unavailable, but I’d be able to hop onto the next one and continue.
It’s commented out… Remove the #
What’s the scale? It might be a passable seafood fork.
Or they work in a regulated industry that requires pseudo-airgapped machines for remote users, e.g. the machine actually interacting with the systems needs to be within the controlled boundary but the company has a presence in multiple locations, so the solution is to have a Citrix server that the users remote into. But because the SSP also has access control requirements at every stage that take a long time to get updated to newest industry standards, the user still needs to have passwords rotated, MFA, and all that kaboodle.
If you’ve ever seen what roosters do to hawks, chickens do do mice or, heck, other weak chickens, then you’d know that they do remember.
Shaka, when the walls fell.
Or ed25519-sk.
The one thing snap does that flatpak doesn’t is provide CLI applications. But then nix also does that, so snap can go pound salt.
I used a Fractal Design case for a home server in the past. Pretty happy with them.
Most of the time it was IRQ 7 for me.