[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

Nettle tea is delicious.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 6 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I tried Grocy for a while, but eventually stopped. Data entry was a huge pain.

Using the iOS companion app to scan grocery items into the app resulted in data issues that prevented me updating the item in the web app later. The only recourse was to add the items by hand in the web app, but then go in to each one separately with the mobile app to register the barcode. This also resulted in losing the additional metadata about the products that the mobile app would automatically configure if you onboarded the items through the mobile app, as it was able to look up additional data online and prefill a lot of stuff.

At the end of the day, it was too much of a hassle. I do like the idea, and may come back to Grocy again, but for now I have to pass.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 26 points 3 months ago

Because they get you places.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 6 points 6 months ago

You didn’t happen to change an unprivileged container to privileged, or vice versa, after creating it, right? Doing so can break filesystem permissions, which could have resulted in something like this.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 5 points 6 months ago

That’s how it works. I don’t think many people use the option.

If it helps, you could choose the keep and unmonitor option, and then once you’ve confirmed that it does indeed impact movies not on your lists (by unmonitoring them), you can disable the cleaning option (or choose a better option for you) and update all your movies back to Monitored.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 121 points 6 months ago

There are two kinds of datacenter admins, those who aren’t using VMWare, and those who are migrating away from VMWare.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 6 points 7 months ago

20 years ago I worked for a grocery company that introduced self checkout terminals. Corporate messaging was that no jobs would be lost. They now run 6 self checkouts in most stores with a single clerk managing them.

It may be true that they didn’t directly let anyone go, but even if they just let attrition do the job, those positions are gone and never coming back.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 7 points 8 months ago

All of that still works for me. Snapping is fine. And you can swap input/output direction when placing a conveyor lift by pressing R.

18

Every time a new update drops, my friends and I set up a server and play together.

We have some basic rules, like don’t touch each others factories. And we have strategies like building a shared rail system where we set up stations at our personal factories to trade manufactured items with each other.

Does anyone else do this kind of thing? If so, what rules do you play by, and what other things do you do in general, to make it fun in a multiplayer setting?

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 6 points 10 months ago

If saving money is a concern, and I had an iPhone 12 (actually I do, but just the regular Pro, not the Max) then I’d stick with what I had, for a number of reasons. The big two being a) existing investment in the ecosystem - most of us have spent hundreds of dollars on apps over the years, and b) the iPhone 12 is not bad tech, and should last for years with nothing more than a battery replacement.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 81 points 10 months ago

tl;dr: It’s a false positive. The headline makes it sound like an intentional classification, but that’s not the case. Also, they fixed the problem two days ago.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 30 points 10 months ago

You’re taking it too literally, and missing much of the nuance between philosophy of design and actual implementation details.

The movies app manages movies. That’s its one thing. No need to overcomplicate it. Unix ‘find’ for instance, finds files. That’s its one thing. ‘find’ also lets you filter the results, but that doesn’t change its purpose of finding files.

The fact that *arr apps don’t do things, or are bad at things, has nothing to do with the Unix philosophy. Were these apps combined into a monolith, the same issues would need to be addressed.

There is no right or wrong in a design philosophy. It’s all trade offs. I don’t know anyone who says Unix (or the metaverse) is successful because of a design philosophy. What matters is what you deliver.

[-] Crogdor@lemmy.world 11 points 10 months ago

I do wish I didn’t need to run a second Radarr instance to have both 1080p and 4K media.

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Crogdor

joined 1 year ago