Are you expecting sonarr to go after historical stuff? You have to manually request a search for anything added that isn't being released in the future. Sonarr only automatically checks for new episodes, not old ones. Like others have said, season searches and interactive searches are useful for anything that's not airing in the future.
alex
Nah, it continues to be pretty solidly boring. Great poster though.
The one really entertaining bit for us was "mystical boinging" being in the subtitles at one point.
That's been a running joke with friends ever since.
But their internet is down, so it'll fail to send to telegram. Realistically it needs to be an external system that is tracking when it receives pings from the home network, so it can show periods where the bash script didn't ping for a while.
Sounds like a reason to set up a drill press in the kitchen
Huh, you're completely correct. Sorry about that, my brain wouldn't accept that that was a 3.5mm port. It looks weird.
So yeah, that's exactly what that port is for. Good call.
I don't see one - and also, this is hooked up to an AV in port. I've never seen a TV with 1/8" audio-in.
Yep, the app is by far the easiest way to deal with it, and it's got a great amount of troubleshooting options too.
It's really nice seeing people understanding that reducing the use of a word because of compassion is not a bad thing. Good work on examing your language.
I'd also encourage people to have a look at the words they use to describe erratic or unexplainable things. My partner has mental health issues, and hearing people constantly using "insane" and all of its fellows became really alienating for them. It's bizarre how quickly you start to find alternative words you forgot existed.
There are speed and developer experience improvements, and a whole bunch of it is there to optimise for mobile. They have some info in the FAQ on jmap.io. It's something I won't 100% take without any consideration - it is written by the fastmail Devs - but a modern stateless protocol is no bad thing.
I'm also on Migadu for email, and I can say the experience has been pretty excellent. They have good instructions for setup stuff, and their pricing model is great. The pricing model has things in common with rsync.net, where they impose a soft limit on storage and reach out if you start exceeding it to talk about upgrading.
I do wonder if other mail providers will at some stage support jmap, it seems like it could take away some frustrations.
It'd be worth checking out Borg as an alternative to rsync. Borg will handle snapshotting, and automatically de-dupe on a block-by-block basis.
I use it for all of my remote backups, and it provides a lot of quality of life stuff that rsync isn't going to handle.