

For those of you who don’t want to watch a 20+ minutes video: This video describes the setup of steam on a arm-based arduino single-board computer with only 2GB of RAM. In the end, it worked … barely


For those of you who don’t want to watch a 20+ minutes video: This video describes the setup of steam on a arm-based arduino single-board computer with only 2GB of RAM. In the end, it worked … barely


Even then, there are lots of edge cases with e-mail that are easy to get wrong and might become security risks.
I‘m not saying this applies to this project, this is more of a general concern.
The latest open weights model from google might be a good fit for you. The 26B model works pretty well on my machine, though the performance isn’t great (6 tokens per second, CPU only).
Fex is the translation layer that is planned to be used in the new Steam Frame VR headset. And it looks like this emulation layer is making good progress and lots of performance improvements.


Does it offer notifications?
3 of your docker containers have new versions available
With portainer business, you could easily build an update procedure yourself. Just create webhooks for the stacks you want to update and run a daily curl script that triggers these hooks.


I think the “it retains 98% charge” quote might be misleading. Thats true for the capacity (in Ah), but not for the energy (in Wh). The report shows this clearly in the tables:

Efficiency is about 83% if my math is right (which is still good).


The report is from an independant institute from Finland, not Poland:
VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd
This doesn’t have anything to do with AI, but I’d really wish YouTube/Google/Facebook wouldn’t be full of scam ads. It feels that at least one third of all ads are scam, overpriced dropshippers or gambling.
Does robots.txt really work in the fediverse? At least on lemmy, the content can be retrieved on different hosts, all of which have different robots.txt files. Unless it is somehow “baked” into the protocol.
Maybe try some TLS-based VPN? This should work almost anywhere, because it looks like a standard HTTPS connection.
Wireguard - even on port 443 - is special as it uses UDP protocol and not the more widely used TCP protocol.
That website contains two examples and five short paragraphs. I think this is reasonable