![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/06baf4f7-1193-4b81-b333-5103281248e8.jpeg)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/d2e1ce0e-4bc8-48ba-8e8c-e0b6fcef159b.png)
Possibly because of the embedded images in my comment there, that post is slow to scroll, interact with comments, etc.
Wasn’t sure if its on my end alone, or if the post is an anomaly that brings voyager to its knees for all.
Musician, mechanic, writer, dreamer, techy, green thumb, emigrant, BP2, ADHD, Father, weirdo
https://www.battleforlibraries.com/
#DigitalRightsForLibraries
Possibly because of the embedded images in my comment there, that post is slow to scroll, interact with comments, etc.
Wasn’t sure if its on my end alone, or if the post is an anomaly that brings voyager to its knees for all.
Yeah!
through deep learning
Belongs after
investigations
Love jails. My server didn’t move with me to Central America, and I miss Free/TrueNAS jails
I’d use the find
command piped to mv
and play with some empty test folders first. I’m not familiar with Nemo, though I’ve used it for a short while. I’ve never tried the bulk renaming features if they exist.
Depending in how much variation you have in the preceding underscores, REGEX may be useful, but if its just a lot of single underscores you can easily trim them with a single version of the script.
Edit: corrected second command typo. I think there’s a rename command I haven’t used in ages that may have args to help here too, but I’m away from the PC
If you dare, you can automated it with some simple scripting. If I had more than 20 or 30, I’d probably go that route.
Yeah, that sounds like a better long-term solution for you. Once you change your workflow, you shouldn’t have to do it again anyway!
Not a fix, but a workaround I use when symbols and punctuation are treated this way: I use lowercase letters to precede folder names to get the sort I want.
aFolder1
bFolder2
Not elegant, but it works in your case. You could also try other file managers, like Thunar to see if they manage sorting differently
Thx for this comment.
My main drive for self hosting is to escape data harvesting and arbitrary query limits, and to say, “I did this.” I fully expect it to be painful and not very fulfilling…
https://matilabs.ai/2024/02/07/run-llms-locally/
Haven’t done this yet, but this is a source I saved in response to a similar question a while back.
Worst timeline? Could be…
Man, Google really does suck now. It feels nearly impossible to get something like a how-to deep in the Debian FAQs to come up, as it mostly surfaces this auto-generated SEO crap
By design. The longer you’re Googling, the more ads they can sell.
…Ben Gomes – a long-tenured googler who helped define the company during its best years – lost a fight with Prabhakar Raghavan, a computer scientist turned manager whose tactic for increasing the number of search queries (and thus the number of ads the company could show to searchers) was to decrease the quality of search. That way, searchers would have to spend more time on Google before they found what they were looking for.
And many, many mobile apps out there, except this one is the bad one, because: China.
My point is that meaningful privacy legislation would stop all apps from doing this with our data, but we have legislators who only pretend to care if a bogeyman has access to the data, and forget the part where any adversary could simply buy the data on the open data market.
I’m personally less interested in China having access to my daily movements than I am my own government, which includes states that are trying to criminalize going to certain medical providers.
I’d prefer if nobody had access, but I can see through the charade. These legislators are invested in technology that competes with China, and that collect and sell our data, so they prefer to keep things the way they are and pick winners and losers.
Dumb.
“We are too corrupt to draft meaningful privacy legislation, but watch as we pretend CCP is the real problem.”
Performative BS
Why is green bad and red good? Seems like the color choices are as odd as the opinions in the list.
Added the ability to select an action when starting playback (for example, you can choose to continue playback from an interrupted position), providing more control over the playback experience.
We have been able to do this in previous versions at least back to v17…
Improved AV1 support is welcome, and the ffmpeg change as well.
Unlike other clients, it concentrates on albums.
Trying to wrap my head around this. In the context of music on Linux, I listen to albums exclusively. Am I an outlier?
The same reason people buy the cereal their grocer places at eye-level, and buy their cars from the stealer: marketing
OP asks about HDD technology, and somehow you found a way to ignore the main ask of their question, AND offer a response including a discussion about a hypothetical home renovation.
“I see you want to know X, but I know about construction, so how about Z or Q? Eh?”
Bravo.
OP, WD Red NAS drives are usually 5400 with low cache and go at least up to 10TB. Might have to buy soon, as I don’t see much new stock.
Well as long as you’re aware of the risk and prepared for it, its not so bad to run in a volatile way like that. I ran my TN box for almost a decade on the same USB boot before I finally caved and picked up three Intel enterprise SSD for the job, with one as a cold spare. Nothing in the vox was critical or would be missed for more than a few beers of crying.
Thx. Once it’s loaded, does it seem normal to you?