Interesting bit about the surplus wind! I hadn’t thought of that, and didn’t know that boats can have a dedicated hydro generator device. Thanks!
I don’t understand why sailboats have an advantage. What do they have for generating wind that the other boats don’t? All boats experience the same wind. Do the propeller+engine on a sailboat act as a generator when the boat moves with wind power?
Oh man, what a throwback! I had completely forgotten about this. It made a splash and then I never heard anything more about it. One of my coworkers installed it on his Toshiba laptop and ran it for a week or two before giving up.
For usb, make sure to get one with UASP https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2020/uasp-makes-raspberry-pi-4-disk-io-50-faster
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No, thats not how it works now. You used to have to install docker-compose and run docker-compose
, but now you don’t. Docker comes with compose, but you call it as docker compose
rather than the old Python module based way docker-compose
https://www.docker.com/blog/new-docker-compose-v2-and-v1-deprecation/
I saw in your update you mentioned installing docker-compose. Modern docker has “compose” as a verb, and should work as docker compose
. I haven’t tested this on raspberry pi though.
Not my last, but after using killall
in Linux, I tried it on hpux, only to discover and later confirm in the manage that on hpux it doesn’t take any arguments, it just kills every process.
The 4 inch ones are awesome! I have a whole collection of different 4 inch cables for when I travel, and for when I take my laptop to the cafe. They’re also great for microcontrollers, like the mouse jiggler I made from a pico 2040.
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Not only is it random, it’s nearly impossible to find something you have seen before. Awful all around.
There’s a Firefox plugin that replaces YT thumbnails with stills from the video. It makes browsing YT so much better.
Also just fuck Broadcom in general for all the other dumb shit they do.
God I miss ytmnd https://owleyes.ytmnd.com/
See also: competitive cognitive artifacts. https://philosophicaldisquisitions.blogspot.com/2016/09/competitive-cognitive-artifacts-and.html
These are artifacts that amplify and improve our abilities to perform cognitive tasks when we have use of the artifact but when we take away the artifact we are no better (and possibly worse) at performing the cognitive task than we were before.
Related: a list and explanation of variable naming conventions https://www.pluralsight.com/blog/software-development/programming-naming-conventions-explained
I was having flashbacks to Cars 2.
I used to love trying every new Ubuntu release. Then snap came along. :( After 17 years of Ubuntu (6.04-23.10), with only a few years of centos in the middle, I switched back to Debian. I see this release is still all-on snap. Lame.