

There are some plug-ins for Calibre that might be able to help you.
There are some plug-ins for Calibre that might be able to help you.
It’s not a great deal for the libraries. They ebooks can come with a limited number of checkouts and cost far more.
I switched to Kobo and have been very happy so far. I was able to download my books from Amazon and mumble and then I was able to read them on my Kobo device and store them in my Calibre library.
Like mDNS?
It’s poor design on Nvidias part. There is no load balancing.
I continue to be impressed with the Arch community and their dedication to collecting information about Linux into one place. Props to everyone that has contributed! You really are helping users solve problems everyday!
It’s less than before the first GN rant. IMO It’s much more relaxed and thoroughly written now. IMO The ECC Squad effort is actually working. IMO It’s still mostly dumb, bleeding edge, junk food content; but it’s easier to watch now than before.
It’s not your cup of tea, fine. Then don’t watch.
I used that to turn an HX into a church service streaming cam. The zoom and quality were fantastic! It was far better than that knock off webcam they had before. Literally saved thousands of dollars thanks to Sony releasing that software!
Reporting is not to be emotional. Editorials are where the emotion goes.
Proxmox can be a bit of a bear to setup. The documentation is not very approachable for new users. It uses a lot of terms without definition which is a deadly sin of technical writing IMO. Guides for getting an Ubuntu Server VM setup vary wildly and often recommend outdated settings.
I’m totally on board with using it though. It eliminates the need to start from scratch when migrating to newer hardware.
Set up your favorite Linux server distro and then go ham on setting up docker (dockge is a great tool to introduce compose).
Just having something that shows the field options and formats it correctly would be fantastic. Tooltips and all that could be added later to lower the bar of entry for new users.
Then you ask questions about what the past person could possibly have been thinking. You wonder what logic path brought them to create the code this way. You check git blame. It was you.
Today it decided to not mark messages read after I had opened them.
Reading the GitHub page for pythonz makes it seem a little easier to get into than pyenv. I think that might just be documentation learning curve though. Have you tried both?
PARTIALLY!? The Vision shipped without a lens cover. It did ship with a cover for the outside face.
I was actually on the fence between that one and the non f for a lower power server build. Something that would finally put my 7700k to rest.
Moto X (2013) has a 360 demo movie on it. It was alright and neat to spin around in your chair to follow the action, but at the same time I could have sat still and the camera moved.
They don’t have the capability to share free videos from Floatplane. They mentioned it on WAN a few weeks ago.
Audiobookshelf is self-hosted and has an Android app. Playback is synced between everything.
I’m using PodcastRepublic on Android right now. It does a fantastic job of organizing my daily playlist for exactly what order I prefer to listen to episodes. The down side is that there is no easy way to translate this nice playlist stuff to the browser website. The state of the website is “mostly functional” and plays audio. Not much else. There is no sync to the Android app.
What I am going to try next is Audiobookshelf with a python script on their API to get the same playlist sorting features. I’ve got the architecture written out, but haven’t gotten the time to write the code.
Reading into gpodder here is making want to give that a try, but the only website listed on this table doesn’t say it syncs playback progress.
So what I’m looking for is something this can sort playlists like PodcastRepublic and sync playback progress like PocketCasts. AFAIK that combo doesn’t exist right now.
I keep a Win10 VM kicking for things like this. Sure I could probably do it with Wine, but sometimes I just take the easy route.