I got an ender 3 pro for about $100 a couple years ago
I got an ender 3 pro for about $100 a couple years ago
You don’t want your computer to gain incredible, godlike powers?
I’m using Zoho. It’s pretty cheap and wasn’t hard to set up with my domain.
Zenni optical is another affordable online option! Or eye buy direct. I’ve only used Zenni, but all of my glasses since like 2011 have come from them and I’ve had 0 issues!
At my parents’ place, it’s about 9 miles (~14km) to the nearest gas station/convenience store, which has super limited hours, or roughly a 15 minute drive. It’s about 14 miles (~23km) to the nearest grocery store, or about a 20 minute drive.
I live in the suburbs of a major city, so the nearest stores from me are around a mile (1.6km) away. The nearest big supermarket is like 2 miles (3.2km) away.
The same reason 6 is afraid of 7.
That’s a 4770k, so the CPU is from ~2014, so the motherboard is probably similar vintage.
Mint MATE also looks and works a lot like Windows.
The only part of it that I felt sucked was the timed war table stuff. The rest was a solid, great game. Were there parts that could have been better? Yes. Does that make the game bad overall? No.
On the positive side, if your vaultwarden server dies, the cached vault on any/all of your devices can be logged into and export the vault.
Framework is amazing (I have a 7840u 13in) but they’re expensive. 100% worth it to me as an enthusiast and IT professional but possibly not for someone less interested in the tech itself.
It really does feel like their setup process is broken! Also, they fortunately only seem to break every 6ish months or so, which isn’t a lot but it’s really not great either. Maybe since it’s a newer one it’ll break less for the person you set it up for!
I have a few of them at work, installed by my predecessor. They randomly break when the app updates and are a pain to get back online.
Their driver support supposedly has gotten a lot better, but I can’t confirm myself. I did get their cheap a380 for an encoder card for my Jellyfin server because it’s pretty much the cheapest offering with an AV1 hardware encoder. It’s working great for that so far.
Why would your Jellyfin traffic need to go over the Internet if it’s on your local network? You should be able to install the Jellyfin app on your smart TV/Roku/etc or use the web client from a computer, point it at the Jellyfin local IP address, and view it over your LAN.
That’s just standard nVidia procedure.
Awesome, glad you got it working!
It could be cool for using your old framework board when you upgrade.