Keep using it. I’m sure it’ll catch on…
You're a software developer you answer that.
lol. What a shit take.
Yep, just us democrats that hate our planes falling apart in flight!
Stop attempting to doxx someone which could get the Lemmy server admin in legal trouble!
What’s the problem with EVs?
I thought the exact same thing. It’s written like the uncanny valley of English.
Then Supes be half-assin' jobs. lol
Yeah…definitely an interesting first picture: Shit’s goin down outside and Supes looks nonplussed about getting into action.
The thumbnail shows Mark Mulletburg.
No mention of Epic in Godot's transparency report.
Yeah god forbid people have to have conversations with one another to learn thing and maybe get a bit of a friendly opinion
What are you referring to?
He canceled $132 billion for 3.9 million people.
So, by any metric, it was delivered.
I read this and was like “pffft….starcraft 2 didn’t come out in 2010 , it was waaaay later”
Then I checked and was like “Well fuck me”
That’s called “ retaliation” and Apple would have to be pretty fucking stupid to do that to the prosecutors at any point, let alone in the middle of a dep.
In. the. text. he. typed.
Whatchu want, a reliable source?
Trust him, brah.
Elaborate
A bot stood him up on a date once.
He ain’t let it go.
How public discourse works, brah.
Best practices in mounting NAS shares?
What are some best practices in mounting NAS shares that you all follow?
Currently I am mounting using fstab to my user’s home directory with full rwx permissions, but that feels wrong.
I’ve read to use the mnt directory or the media directory but opinions differ.
My main concern is I want to protect against inadvertently deleting the contents of the NAS with an errant rm command. And yes I have backups of my NAS too.
Edit: this is a home NAS with 1 user on this Linux PC (the other clients being windows and Mac systems)
Would love to hear everyone’s philosophy! Thanks!