

You can leave it.
You can leave it.
As long as you ran systemctl daemon-reload
, you should be able to try sleeping without needing to reboot.
It might be due to https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/33083.
Try disabling user session freezing when sleeping:
sudo systemctl edit systemd-suspend.service
Add the following to the file:
[Service]
Environment="SYSTEMD_SLEEP_FREEZE_USER_SESSIONS=false"
Reload systemd:
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
After that, try sleeping and waking again.
Apparently Framework did try to get AMD to use LPCAMM, but it just didn’t work from a signal integrity standpoint at the kind of speeds they need to run the memory at.
What filesystem are you using on the external drive? If it is NTFS or FAT, they won’t store permissions on the filesystem, which would explain why the owner/group changes are not persistent. To fix that, you can set the uid/gid on mount in your fstab.
/dev/mapper/YOUR_DRIVE /path/to/mnt <fstype> rw,uid=<jellyfin_uid>,gid=<jellyfin_gid>,dmask=0002,fmask=0113
Are you using the default bridge? I have a similar setup (with Traefik instead of NPM), and for each compose file am using separate networks for the internet, proxy, and backend services.
services:
some_service:
...
networks:
- frontend_network
- proxy_network
- backend_network
backend_service:
...
networks:
- backend_network
networks:
frontend_network:
driver: "bridge"
proxy_network:
driver: "bridge"
internal: true
backend_network:
driver: "bridge"
internal: true
Then which Apple phone are you talking about? The iPhone 15 is pretty much the same size as the Pixel 8. The iPhone SE is the only small phone Apple seems to make, and from what I can tell from a quick search, they aren’t selling a lot of them.
The iPhone 15 is 147.6 height x 71.6 width x 7.8 depth (mm).
The Pixel 8 is 150.5 height x 70.8 width x 8.9 depth (mm)
I would call that pretty much the same size.
No they don’t? The iPhone 12 mini and iPhone 13 mini were the worst performing phones out of their lineup. Small phones are dead because hardly anyone buys them.
Texas does have anti-SLAPP laws passed and they are among the strongest in the nation. Unfortunately, the courts have ruled that they cannot be used in federal courts.
Then Linus responded pretty poorly (and ended up stepping down as CEO and is now a chief creative something or other iirc)
Linus didn’t step down in response to this. I don’t remember the exact timelines, but he either stepped down before this, or was in already in the process of transitioning to the new CEO when this happened.
To native English speakers, yes. To non-native speakers, this is yet another bizarre rule they just have to memorize.
It’s been a while since I took statistics, but yes, I guess that is a binomial distribution. It does not influence the results in the way you are implying it does, though. The calculator does actually account for it (the Population Proportion input), and the sample size actually decreases the lower/higher your proportion is. My point was that a question like, “Do you watch anime weekly,” is not like a question like, “How many hours of anime do you watch in a week,” where you certainly couldn’t assume a normal distribution for the number of hours watched.
Normal distribution with regards to what? “Do you watch anime weekly” is a binary question. There really isn’t a distribution associated with that.
You don’t need a massive sample size for surveys to give meaningful information. Play around with this sample size calculator if you want to see what the margins of error are: https://www.calculator.net/sample-size-calculator.html?type=2&cl2=95&ss2=4000&pc2=5&ps2=500000000&x=Calculate
This really depends on your threat model. If you are only concerned about the drive getting stolen, or wanting to keep the data on it private if you need to RMA the drive, mounting it automatically on boot with a key stored on the rootfs can be perfectly fine. If you are a journalist in a hostile country and protecting your sources from state level actors is a matter of life and death, then yeah, this would be woefully insufficient.