

Once that’s broken into: encryption and backups, purchase new hardware and rebuild. Downtime sucks though.
Once that’s broken into: encryption and backups, purchase new hardware and rebuild. Downtime sucks though.
Yes, but there are a ton of awesome IDEs built on top of the base Visual Studio Code Open Source project, you don’t have to use the Microsoft one.
The icon is pretty borked on Linux
.NET CLI and msbuild are open source, and C# is awesome. And VS Code is open source.
I think they just put them in quadrants with no attention to placement.
If you don’t care about uptime, self host it on the local machine you have and expose it through free cloudflare tunnels.
I had issues with auto scan years ago, just re-enabled it and it’s working fine now so that’s resolved, thanks.
The other issue is still a problem, and why I’ll be switching to Navidrome for music. Jellyfin wasn’t mature enough last time I tried to replace my lifetime Plex pass, but I have a feeling I’ll be ditching Plex entirely soon.
Annoyance: Can’t scan your music library from the PlexAmp app, can’t scan it from the Plex app either. Super frustrating when music as added and you have to struggle with pop-up navigation on the Plex desktop site on mobile.
Game breaker: maybe it’s just really hard to find and undocumented, but there doesn’t seem to be a way to use profiles with PlexAmp, either to have individual play history and playlists, or to age restrict some music content.
Actually, I have my entire code base documented in obsidian, and I literally tell cursor to refer to the documentation. It works amazingly well, and then I have it draft documentation for the new features it’s creating. I can do in a day what I used to do in a week, and it’s not because it’s doing anything advanced, it’s just takes care of so much of the brain draining tedious tasks.
The entire file! My biggest frustration with cursor is that it doesn’t support reading from multiple projects at once so it can see the context of how the projects interact or how interfaces are implemented.
Domains need to be registered annually and DNS servers are needed to route traffic to them. But using an IP directly, you don’t need to worry about domain registration issues that can brick your systems, and you don’t have to worry about DNS providers knowing about your traffic (or maintaining your own private dns).
If it’s not a user trying in a memorable domain, an IP serves much better.
I sync with syncthing to an 8tb hard drive at work. Then backblaze that ish.