Wireguard, like all VPNs, definitely does E2E encryption. What would be the point of an unencrypted VPN?
Wireguard, like all VPNs, definitely does E2E encryption. What would be the point of an unencrypted VPN?
As it seems nobody’s linked it yet, have you read Jellyfin’s hardware selection page? They go into great details about which HW features are required/desired.
In my case I’m running it on a NUC with an i3 8109U + 16GB RAM, it runs great with 2 or 3 transcoding jobs at once. Media are stored on 5400-RPM HDDs.
The Big Lebowski is the pinnacle of humour! Now get off my lawn!
Yep that’s the idea.
It’s a scene from The Big Lebowski, right after The Dude got tortured with a marmot by German nihilists. Walter focuses on the legality of keeping a marmot as a pet, which is obviously not the main issue.
Tried it with a macOS server and gnome client, it worked but I could not see the mouse cursor. Maybe it’s because my laptop has a touch screen, I didn’t bother looking into it further.
The second one doesn’t either.
I guess by the time I came across :x
, :wq
was already too ingrained to bother switching.
That’s why I always select “English (US)” when installing an OS or creating an account online. No bad or missing translation, no mangled UI because of longer words, and of course easily searchable error messages.
Everything is made up of narrow tasks, you “just” need to break it down more :)
I guess it would make sense if you’re testing a public API? To make sure the documentation is sufficient and accurate.
Sure, but nobody codes like that in kotlin (or in modern Java for that matter)
Learn kotlin, it’s awesome and runs on literally everything.
I read your comment before the article and I thought you had made the second quote up lol, unbelievable. And people are throwing money at these guys?