You can literally specify it in your fstab to mount the network share at boot.
Uh, the same is possible with any other file system, too.
//nas/share /mnt/whatever smb3 defaults,auto,username=bob,password=xxx 0 0
You can literally specify it in your fstab to mount the network share at boot.
Uh, the same is possible with any other file system, too.
//nas/share /mnt/whatever smb3 defaults,auto,username=bob,password=xxx 0 0
Diese Liste hast Du schon durch?
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Getting_an_SMIME_certificate
Z.B. InstantSSL wirbt damit, dass es von allen Email-Apps als gültig erkannt wird und kostet nur $15 pro Jahr.
The key component is some cheap DVB-T receiver with an RTL2832U chip and an R820T tuner. These things usually costed around 15€ but went up now as I just found out. Maybe there's a newer/better combination for cheap now.
Cut the small DVB-T antenna to 69mm length for optimal reception on 1090 MHz. Or build your own.
Then you need dump1090 which is the tool using the receiver and tuning it to 1090 MHz to receive the ADS-B packages and decode them. It's providing the decoded packages in different formats on different ports (30002 - RAW / 30003 - SBS / 30005 - Beast mode).
And once this is running, you can just sign up to any ADS-B page, get your feeder ID, take their feeder software and point it to the correct port of dump1090. That's basically it.
I've created my own custom minimalistic containers for dump1090, fr24feed, pfclient and piaware, but you can find universal ones on Docker Hub. The services I feed to are:
(Most of these sites give you premium access to their data in return.)
Oh, and if you live near waterways, this totally works for ships, too. It's just a different frequency (~162 MHz), so you'd need a second DVB-T dongle and different antenna (46.3cm). And the dump1090-equivalent there is called AIS-catcher. With that, you can feed to sites like ShipXplorer, MarineTraffic, etc..
I’ve paid for Lifetime Plex when it was still cheap. And have Jellyfin running on the side to see what it has more to offer. (Also to test Swiftfin.) But as long as Plex “just works” for me, I will probably keep both. On Plex, I have shared libraries from a few friends.
And there’s also Stash, but this has a completely different kind of library management. It allows for bookmarking specific timestamps, has video previews and other things.
No, the device is purely to dump game cartridges. It has nothing to do with your saves (which are stored on your Switch).
To dump your savegames, you need access to your Switch's internal USER partition.
Maybe find an online print shop that does professional book printing? I've just clicked the first result from a quick Google search and https://mixam.co.uk/paperbackbooks can do 944 pages, A4, Silk, 115gsm for about £50. Or 800 pages on Uncoated, 100gsm paper for £45. For thinner paper they need to use a Lithography machine instead of their normal printer, it seems. That's why the price jumps to £3k+ for those. I don't think they care much about WHAT you want to have printed.
Nachdem mein Reddit-Profil keine Kommentare mehr zeigt und ich auch alles, was ich per Google finden konnte, noch gelöscht habe, habe ich mal einen aktuellen Export von Reddit gezogen. Ergebnis: Von insgesamt 9003 Kommentaren über meine 12 Jahre Reddit sind immer noch ca. 7000 im System - nur eben nicht mehr mit meinem Profil verknüpft.
Ich hab jetzt dieses Script genommen, ordentlich gepimpt, und das editiert und löscht jetzt seit einigen Stunden alle meine übrigen Kommentare.
Only if you don't care about the NAS'es file permission management and have the same uid on all your systems mounting the same shares via NFS. Not sure if it's different with other NAS implementations, but on my Synology DS415+ all files put on there via NFS get the UID from the source system. Which isn't the UID of my user on the Synology.
E.g. on my Raspberrys, my user usually is uid 1000 / gid 1000. But on my Synology, my user is uid 1026 / gid 100. So the integrated management tools (e.g. File Station) show mangled permissions as the user with uid 1000 is not known.
And the only real solution to this is to use a Kerberos server - which I think is a bit overkill in a 1 user environment. idmap doesn't really work on my NAS.