Silo. Finally got around to watching it. Only a few episodes left and it’s been really good so far. I was glad to read it got renewed for another season as well.
Yes, they finally fixed support for object recognition. NASCompares recently had a video on this: https://piped.video/watch?v=o5MGNrIOt90
Here's the compatibility list: https://kb.synology.com/en-nz/DSM/tutorial/Which_Synology_NAS_models_support_the_facial_recognition_feature_on_Synology_Photos
These two appear to be the most active and have some similar commits:
It’s a link that’s base64 encoded. Decide it with something like https://www.base64decode.org
Were you able to connect it directly to Home Assistant or do you need their ZigBee hub?
Does the shutoff valve have to be in the shower? Could it be moved to the other side of a wall outside of the shower? The seems like the best long term solution, especially since you have to deconstruct the concrete block it's embedded in anyway.
From what I know of all of the "wet area" products you mentioned, you can cut the materials quite easily and put pieces together to build whatever you want. Once you have the walls and other structures put together, you have to tape and seal all of the joints to prevent water leaks. All of these products have tape/sealant specific to the product line.
Thanks for mentioning this. I didn't know Bitwarden worked with DDG's email service.
The Bitwarden official documentation covers this for anyone looking: https://bitwarden.com/help/generator/
The new Zelda game uses repeated patterns to build a cohesive world. Let's write code to generate these patterns and then print them with a robot!
cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/1122927
> A dump of over 6,500 instruction booklet PDFs from the LEGO website
A dump of over 6,500 instruction booklet PDFs from the LEGO website
Like @DarkKronicle@beehaw.org, I'm using Mealie and it works for my needs. Another popular recipe app is Tandoor but last time I looked the setup was more complicated that what I wanted to get into.
For RSS, I'm using Miniflux which is very lightweight but has nice features.
Here's a whole list of selfhosted apps: https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted. I would recommend looking for apps that solve a problem you're having vs. installing everything that looks interesting.
I don't agree that Tailscale is overkill, it's very quick to set up and allows me to connect with all of my services no matter where I am. I often check the ingredients for a recipe on Mealie while I'm at the grocery store for instance.
Here's a few other communities to check out related to self hosting:
I just went through that process myself. Here's the communities I found so far:
- !artificial_intel@lemmy.ml
- !auai@programming.dev
- !fosai@lemmy.world
- !machinelearning@lemmy.world
- !ArtificialIntelligence@kbin.social
- !gai@sopuli.xyz
- !guide@lemmy.intai.tech
- !generative_ai@links.hackliberty.org
Edit: Fixed my links
grep is a powerful tool for searching code from the terminal. This post will show you how to use grep and why it's an essential developer tool.
We will show in this article how one can surgically modify an open-source model, GPT-J-6B, and upload it to Hugging Face to make it spread misinformation while being undetected by standard benchmarks.
A faster and more accurate method for putting footage of actors in different backgrounds allows directors to see how their shots will appear as they film them
Looks interesting. What do you do for mobile devices that need to connect to your network?
I read about mastodon comments previously, I think it was this article https://carlschwan.eu/2020/12/29/adding-comments-to-your-static-blog-with-mastodon/
Commento looked interesting the last time I was searching for an option.
Or since you’re on the fediverse already, there’s webmentions.