tankerkiller125real

joined 1 year ago
[–] tankerkiller125real@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

In my case the local depot is going to "lose" your package unless you call immediately to their customer service line and force them to put it on a truck for delivery the next day. And then once the truck comes the delivery person will walk on your lawn, will ignore the stairs to your porch, and instead will throw your package over the porch railing resulting in at least a 4ft drop for the package, which more than likely will break it.

Luckily for my framework it came via FedEx Express for some reason, and it has to be signed for so that person actually came to the door and I actually got the package in hand instead of it being dropped.

[–] tankerkiller125real@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

In my case DHL hands off to the USPS, which is better than FedEx in my area... Let that sink in, USPS, handles packages better than a company whose entire job is to handle packages.

[–] tankerkiller125real@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Telnyx, they're very well known, and they run their own network (so it's extremely stable) and it's pretty cheap. Plus you can use Hosted SMS if you want to add SMS capabilities to existing numbers, even land line numbers.

They already exists. They're called Chromebooks 🤣

I don't consider Chromebooks to be real computers... They're tablets with a OS designed for using a keyboard and touchpad. I say that as someone who used to work for a school and repaired laterally hundreds of chromebooks. Everything about chromebooks has more in similarity with a decent tablet than it does a computer.

[–] tankerkiller125real@alien.top 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It took me all of 20 minutes to get qBittorrent, Radarr, Sonarr, and Prowlarr working in docker. And then another 10 minutes to add in the VPN container.

The important thing is that I left the GUI default because they work just fine, there is no need for different GUIs for any of it.

Both, docspell has eliminated all of the filing cabinets in my house (the only thing left is the fireproof/resistant safe for things like birth certificates, SSN cards, etc.). Outline is my note taking and documentation tool, Jellyfin is where most of my media lives now, ChannelDVR gives me access to TV via Jellyfin, etc.

But I also really like playing with random open source projects and seeing if they have any use to me.