Yup, thats my mistake. I was remembering soda dungeon incorrectly.
Iirc in 'Pixel dungeon' you can auto play after you have levelled up a bit manually.
Pixel Dungeon (Rogue-like) https://f-droid.org/packages/com.watabou.pixeldungeon/
If they are dried, soak it overnight and cook in on a preassure cooker. if they are fresh its easier to cook.
This -> Speed Thanks for the tip about iperf
I agree.
But imo these usecases are more known and mature in traditional setups, we could apt update
and restart a systemd service and its done.
Its not so obvious and there are no mechanisms for containers/images.
(I am not into devops/sysadmin, so this might also be my lack of exposure)
There can also be old images with e.g. old openssl versions being used. Its not a concern if they are updated frequently, but still manual.
It can pull and build containers fine but last time I tried there were some differences. Mounts were not usable because user uid/gid behave quite differently. Tools like portainer dont work on podman containers. I havent tried out any networking or advanced stuff yet.
But i found that the considerations to write docker files are quite different for podman.
Genuinely asking, why was this done? Is this better quality than alternatives? or cheaper? or just having a unique piece to flaunt?
I wonderbif there is a way to measure this. Like a speed test for LAN.
Right? I also wanted slightly longer 2m cables, but thats secondary.
I have 3 ethernet cables together with a dozen power, audio, display cables. Would it be better if I have a separate bundle for them? How would i check if they are shielded? They are around a meter long each.
So I self host some stuff like jellyfin, ssh server for borg backup etc. over lan(Asus RT-AX53U router).
And just noticed that i still use cat5 and cat5e cables.
Does it make sense to upgrade to newer cat8 cables?
Also dead cells, Rim world, into the breach, slay the spire. Ran fine on my old i5.