DLNA is going to be your best bet, but it’s such a deep and convoluted rabbit hole. There’s a lot of ways to configure a setup.
DLNA is going to be your best bet, but it’s such a deep and convoluted rabbit hole. There’s a lot of ways to configure a setup.
Source for that last one? I have some in laws I’d like to pass the reference to.
Well there were outbreaks before. They were handled by the people that are supposed to handle it. Covid… Well the people that are supposed to handle it were fired and and the administration in charge thought a pandemic would be good to thin out the city voters block.
To be fair a hotplate could play games better than a p4 and do it while staying cooler.
I have a box with 10 old laptops that I keep around, just for that. Unreal tournament 2004, Insane, Brood Wars and all the Id classics. I don’t get to set it up a lot, but when I do it’s always a hit.
That joke takes me back. Had to double check if I was on slashdot.
Strong lifts. The built in timer is great. Just don’t look at anything else on your phone. I put on Audible and just lift.
First search result I got was https://github.com/pureqml/qmlcore Never used it, but seems good.
We did it guy’s! They said it couldn’t be done. We showed them, those stupid, liberal, egg heads. U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A! /s
Another Rider user. I write mainly backed code, and integrations etc. Work is Rider and Datagrip on windows. Home is Debian KDE with Rider and Datagrip. I love it. If only I can convince my it group to allow Debian on my work computer.
I’ve been using an open garage device I ordered from https://opengarage.io/ for years. It works great with home assistant or by itself. (their opensprinkler control is great too)
Loved the wobbly windows
Like VRML from the 90s? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VRML?wprov=sfla1
I had textbooks in college (25 years ago) that always had little blurbs about the acronyms and their pronunciation. GUI, we were instructed, was pronounced gooey. WYSIWYG is wiz-ee-wig, etc. It was on tests IIRC.
It’s kind of like hiring a bunch of physicists to design a bridge. It’ll probably be a great bridge, but also probably overly complex, expensive and late. And for some reason made out of a novel alloy.
What happened to estimating the pessimistic, most likely and optimistic times and apply that to a beta distribution? That’s how I was taught back in the dark ages.
When I first read your title, I thought it was “how hard disk drives work” like “Do you know how hard your mom works for you?” And I thought “well yeah, I guess they do work hard, and we kind of take it for granted”. Then I realized I’m an idiot.
The trouble for me was always getting people to use the controllers. I had some success with some family members using bubbleupnp on their Android phones. But the separation between sources, renderers and controllers is a little confusing for non technical people