

I’ve never heard of an archiving program that didn’t.
I’ve never heard of an archiving program that didn’t.
To be clear, the system picked out faces in the crowd, in the “yes, this is a face” sense. They were labeled in what appears to be random terms like positive, kind, nostalgic, bee keeper, gif animator, extreme ironer. No personal identification.
Someone explain the big deal to me, as someone that’s never owned a Samsung phone. It just looks like a few small UI theme tweaks. Is there any significant benefit to Samsung’s modifications?
What’s in the log?
Is Borderlands really all that popular still? Like I remember seeing the first few games everywhere, and people talking about them, but that was years ago. I realize I’m biased but I would expect to hear something about them…
Then you should just keep backups of your user data separate from your OS, so that you can more easily migrate.
Corruption is unlikely, but permissions might be a problem.
How much free space do you have? You might be able to shrink the NTFS and create another (I usually use xfs for data partitions), copy the data, then delete NTFS and expand xfs to full size.
Do they claim any kind of privacy? Have they been audited?
Define “give a good connection”. If it’s activating the microphone too, the connection quality will drop because of the bandwidth requirements.
Can it run any kind of virtualization? Pass that 16gb partition as a raw disk, run your OS installer, then boot the partition directly instead of as a VM.
Well, it’s apple hardware and runs macos, so it’s a bit kneecapped. It’s not as flexible. But it is solid and you can run almost anything you can on Linux.
Where does “wearing a shirt” fall on the peacefulness scale?
I just listen to public radio or local FM music stations.
But then I’m an elderly millennial, so. Until recently, the fanciest feature in my car was a CD player.
Hannah Montana Linux.
/thread
I’m not familiar with n8n but most databases have a corresponding GUI. phpmysql for mariadb, pgadmin for postgres, and so on.
You will need to configure your proxy to pass that information, and your analytics to read it. Usually this is the x-forwarded-for header.
I’m pretty sure gmail’s filters are per-user. I’ve had it react after just one flag/unflag, and I doubt that it would do that it would only take one action to change it for everyone.
Yes, it’s the link to the Youtube clip in the embed in the article.