Fellow humans should I finish the bird muscle with a saccharine concoction, an overfermented grape extract concoction, or a ground plant concoction from the geographic region of Carolina? I know us fellow humans frequently debate the proper and just pairing of concoction and flesh.
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I also had this problem but after setting my current location which requests location permissions it works. I think there’s a slight bug where it doesn’t ask for location permissions on launch. Similarly, the rain notification was failing because it only asked for location permissions while using the app not constantly.
Waking up in the bag is a known problem with Windows’ new sleep mode but the rest ¯\_( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)_/¯
OpenMediaVault! It has a nice web UI and it’s Debian based. However the development cycle doesn’t always line up with Debian releases so sometimes it can take a few months to switch major versions.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•How do we package food products sustainably in coming decades?1·1 year agoHmm, that’s interesting. I’d be curious in how that would be cured and how the layers would stick together. Plaster might be interesting too since it has a faster setting period than clay.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•How do we package food products sustainably in coming decades?1·1 year agoMost clay is likely safe to ingest. However the willingness of customers to ingest clay may vary and the quantity of clay may impart a flavor on the product.
I’m also not sold on the printing process. Ceramic is strongest when the clay platelets are aligned and in a 3d printing process there are many layers. Each of the layers introduces a weak point that is likely to crack in drying or use. Ceramics already have quite efficient methods for production primarily slipcasting and extrusion. In these methods pieces are formed without “joins”.
I’m also not convinced printing it at home would be feasible for mass production/adoption.
That being said it is an interesting idea. I think you could probably make single use, unglazed, low-fire ware like Indian Bhar. Which could get recycled into aggregate. Firing adds emissions back into the process though and I’m not sure where that ranks compared to something with an existing supply chain like paper alternatives.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•How do we package food products sustainably in coming decades?2·1 year agoAs a former ceramic artist I would be very wary of this solution. Bone dry clay is way too fragile to survive transportation unless very carefully packed. Potentially an air dry paper clay could work but even then it isn’t very durable.
As you mentioned in your comment, the minute bone dry clay touches liquid it starts to slake down. So you would end up with clay mush in your food and the structure would start to fall apart.
Additionally, silica dust from bone dry clay is really bad for you. Probably not very likely to effect the occasional consumer but people interacting with it often would be at an elevated risk for lung issues.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•OpenMediaVault 7.0 Released For Debian 12 Powered NAS Platform2·1 year agoYeah I upgraded my Odroid and ran into some issues with Armbian but I was able to work through it thanks to this post. I guess Armbian broke the repos a little and it prevented OMV from cleanly auto updating with the script.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Encrypted hard drive asking for password every time1·1 year agoAh, good to know.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Encrypted hard drive asking for password every time3·1 year agoIIRC and I may be wrong here the drive stays encrypted in sleep. Decryption is done in real time via your CPU. However the encryption key is stored in unencrypted RAM. Which is why the other comment suggests encrypting swap and hibernating, this writes RAM to disk.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Encrypted hard drive asking for password every time9·1 year agoTo be fair there are probably many different ways to solve the problem. I’m somewhat experienced with Linux and I’ve attempted seeing up TPM LUKS decryption on boot. It’s certainly not easy or at least wasn’t when I tried. For non experienced people it’s easier to just enter the password at boot and enable auto login. Then you get the security, software, ethics, or licensing debates that accompany most Linux discussions.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Encrypted hard drive asking for password every time11·1 year agoThey do understand the point. The problem is that if you use TPM to unlock on boot it is slightly self defeating. Now the attacker has access to your display manager or TTY. They can guess passwords, try to bypass the biometric checks, or find an exploit. But that does indicate a higher tech level that your average thief.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Encrypted hard drive asking for password every time5·1 year agoThe common way to do it with LUKS2 and TPM as detailed on the Arch wiki. Not sure if that’ll apply at all to ZFS and Zorin though
It is less secure though. What I do is set my computer to log in on start and I set up fingerprint auth. So I only need to login once on startup with the drive decryption.
Here’s a reddit post on using clevis, TPM, and ZFS to decrypt.
You should also know that if you’re mobo dies so does your data.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Is Clonezilla still a solid choice for complete backup and restoration of partition(s) / drive(s) nowadays?1·1 year agoAh I missed the partitions part
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•How do you stay up to date with industry trends?6·1 year agoTo add to this podcasts and rss feeds in your field.
PainInTheAES@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Is Clonezilla still a solid choice for complete backup and restoration of partition(s) / drive(s) nowadays?41·1 year agoI use kopia, it’s more automated and deduplicates snapshot.
I think it does. If you make the choice to poorly manage your distro’s tools/website it shows that you aren’t responsible enough to manage the distro. They also had the laptop purchasing issue.
I’m not saying every distro needs to be super organized and testing shit but they should be before I recommend it to someone. Especially when there are other Arch based distros that don’t have the issues.
The newbie stuff is fair enough. I do think they get extra flak here because the distro was marked as Arch for noobs.
I don’t think that would be the case. The AUR helper would pull the updated dependencies from the Arch repos which would not be available in Manjaro’s repos
They’re valid arguments and people should be informed about it mainly because of how it was recommended a lot for beginners.
It ships with some gaming stuff, uses zen kernel, has some performance mods (I guess), and a theme as ugly as sin. But you can make any distro do what it does. I’m sure it’s in the same territory as Nobara.
Do you have proof of Manjaros usual arguments being unrelated or false? The things I’ve read over the years seem like valid criticism.
Why he lookin at me like that