stardustsystem

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 18 points 4 days ago (4 children)

That's actually easy.

The shape of the district gets decided based on the concentration of votes for one party. The goal is to make enough districts with enough concentration of your voters that you always win those districts, and make the rest of the state have few enough districts with enough of a mix of of voters for both parties that A) the for-sure districts can't be lost and B) the not-for-sure districts can never oppose the for-sure districts as long as they remain under your party's control.

So all the rigging party needs to do is campaign enough in the for-sure districts that they can't lose, and campaign enough in the not-for-sure districts that their opponent can't win. And then because of the Electoral College, all of the states votes go to the rigged party.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (8 children)

I can't do shit about that in Pennsylvania. You'd think there would have been more an effort to disprove the allegations or fix the problems sometime between 1865 and now.

 

A classic ft. Jesse Dangerously and MC Hawking

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I use Nextcloud for contacts, calendars, files, bookmarks, passwords, to do lists, Kanban boards, and recipies. You absolutely can turn nextcloud into a 365 competitor if that's your jam

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago (1 children)

You might want to set up dynamic DNS for your domain. If you're hosting from a residential internet connection then your ISP will change your address eventually. Ddclient can be used to report your current IP to your Registrar regularly, so if it changes the domain moves along with it.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

Early Pink Floyd, especially the albums A Saucerful of Secrets and Meddle

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

They don't read the books they just buy them

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 month ago (1 children)

If we're gonna give everybody from Classic Who bit parts in new Who, the show needs to do a better job of explaining who the hell these people are besides 'oh the Doctor is excited so they're friendly'

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

The Jackboot fits, I don't care how much he cries about wearing it.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

Published 2018 about a 2013 study. Still messed up.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Build is solid, but here's some suggestions.

  1. Another 8TB HDD. the reason being you can merge the 4 drives of the same size into a RAID5 array for data redundancy.
  2. An SSD to install the OS on.
  3. (Optional) More RAM check the mobo to see the max size and speed it can handle, and then fill every slot with that.
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I tried Joplin for a while but dropped it, too simple. Also tried Trilum, which I liked more but it's still a very young project.

Eventually, my Obsidian vault will go there, but not just yet.

 

The concept album at the heart of the 2016 Kickstarted reboot of a 2003 cult classic rhythm game. Between the original and this reimagining, developer Harmonix would rewrite the book on music games via Guitar Hero 1, 2, and then Rock Band and its sequels before returning to smaller fan-requested projects like this one and my poor, sweet Chroma.

A woman trapped in her own mind and a man willing to undertake an experimental medical procedure to save her, told over 15 levels/tracks. Gameplay involves rapidly switching paths to shoot targets in time with a different instrument on each path, eventually completing enough sequences to make all tracks play simultaneously and hear the complete song. Powerups and a score system keep players aiming for perfect performance and timing on each instrument and each track.

 
 

Hello everybody, happy Monday.

I'm hoping to get a little help with my most recent self-hosting project. I've created a VM on my Proxmox instance with a 32GB disk and installed Ubuntu, Docker, and CosmOS to it. Currently I have Gitea, Home Assistant, NextCloud, and Jellyfin installed via CosmOS.

If I want to add more services to Cosmos, then I need to be able to move the containers from the VM's 32GB disk into an NFS Share mounted on the VM which has something like 40TB of storage at the moment. My hope is that moving these Containers will allow them to grow on their own terms while leaving the OS disk the same size.

Would some kind of link allow me to move the files to the NFS share while making them still appear in their current locations in the host OS (Ubuntu 24.04). I'm not concerned about the NFS share not being available, it runs on the same server virtualizing everything else and it's configured to start before everything else so the share should be up and running by the time the server is in any situation. If anyone can see an obvious problem with that premise though, I'd love to hear about it.

17
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Released on this day 49 years ago

 

Hey folks! Hope your day's going good.

I'm hoping someone else has had this problem or knows the application enough to where they can help me. I'm moving my main desktop from W10 to linux (Q4OS, Debian-based) and it's gone well so far.

The only thing I truly need Windows for is work, so I've decided to build a Win11 VM on my Proxmox server and remote into it when I need to do work there. Install went smoothly, and my M365 user is the Admin of the W11 box. Remote Desktop is enabled, and my user is added to the Remote Desktop Users group on the local machine.

I had issues remoting in from anywhere, but after researching I was able to make a shortcut that worked on a Windows machine by adding the below options to the .rdp file. With these added, a web page opens and takes me through M365 authentication, and then I remote in.

username:s:.\AzureAD\[email protected]

enablecredsspsupport:i:0

authentication level:i:2

`Note: email address changed for anonymity'

I've tried and failed several different ways to remote into this machine via Remmina. It works as described from Windows machines, but Remmina doesn't seem able to open the webpage that lets me sign in. Instead, I get Remmina's login prompt which I've so far been unable to log in through. This occurs whether I create a profile from scratch or if I import the previously-mentioned RDP file.

I have 2 Windows 10 VMs which are just regular solo machines, and I have no trouble remoting into them, it's just the Azure/Entra joined machine that causes this.

I'd like to use my Azure account on the VM so I can keep work at work, so to speak, and so I don't have to activate Windows (a license is included in my business account). If anyone's got some kind of solution or can tell me how to apply the options above to Remmina, I'd love to know how.

 

On This Day 45 Years ago...

 
 
 
 

Chill vibes for your eclipse morning

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