are you implying that XKCD isn't a shitpost?
Rule 1: Always follow Rule 2 Rule 2: Never follow Rule 1
ok so I don't really drink alcohol, but some online friends got me to try soju. Grabbed some from the store and... I don't get it. very much an alcohol taste to it. I can taste the plum in it, but it's just not that great imo.
the problem isn't that these ones don't, it's that others do
Take a look at Ollama.ai, just follow the installation instructions. A decent GPU is recommended, and the models are around 10GB iirc.
- SponsorBlock (by the same guy) to cut out in video ads
until then: DCS
Jokes on you, I don't need AI to tell me that. I couldn't make a good build in Minecraft if you held me at gunpoint.
only triple? there's a couple that I'm waiting on a repress for that are listed for 10x the price
Lemmy was overall a very small part of it. It is a very small community compared to other social platforms. Even if every single Lemmy user owned Helldivers 2 AND left a review, it would still account for less than a quarter of the recent Steam reviews.
There's a surprising amount of overlap between XKCD's comics and content that would fit in the "Children's Fun Fact Science Corner" section of Welcome to Night Vale
This kind of tool is popular for red teaming. Look at Deviant Ollam's videos.
However, I think that this product kind of fails to do its job in the given scenario. You need to fully disassemble the package to access the polymer clay. If you only have the key for a few seconds at most, you won't have time to take it apart and then put the key in the mold.
I'd assume because the majority of people here don't use Apple products
I'm new to networking and self-hosting and have no idea where to start.
I've been slowly working my way though a list of skills to learn, both to put on my resume and as personal growth. Networking is the next thing on this list. I am not sure what I am looking for, but I want to start another project. I have built many a personal computer, but the world of networking is a pretty foreign concept to me.
I have experience with building computers and a minor glance at the network-side of things. I've set up a Pi-Hole or two and set a basic CUPS server up on a RPi0w, but beyond that, I have no idea what I'm doing, or even what the possibilities are. I just see posts like this and think that it's a pretty cool hardware project.
Is there any resources you recommend to start learning, maybe what the hardware does? From my outsider's perspective, I see a lot of people's racks have at least a router, switch, and firewall, along with various other machines.
E: thank you all for the suggestions! I'll have to take some time to figure out what to do first