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Do you know how that works exactly or do you have a link where I can educate myself on the topic of using Python online in a sort-of-IDE? I‘m teaching Python fundamentals and don’t know how to sail around helping everyone with their individual problems with their machines while installing python or an ide.


I'll bet they're using this, that's exactly what it is designed for: https://tljh.jupyter.org/en/latest/

Alternatively, you could do something similar with Google Colab and a notebook you make to serve as a template.


https://www.colorado.edu/cs/students/computing-resources-stu...

Refer to the section titled “CSCI JupyterHub Coding Environment”

Alternatively, as another user pointed out: https://tljh.jupyter.org/en/latest/install/custom-server.htm...


In case you mean the games on iPhone on the App Store, they generate revenue for Apple via in game transactions and not by game sales necessary. What people typically play on PCs are not the same games. Most of the games, as you can see with CS2, aren’t even available on iOS or macOS which is a problem. Outside of that I think you can run the games for iPhone on Mac as well but even then optimisation is necessary.


> they generate revenue for Apple via in game transactions

Once upon a time, there were many iOS games that you paid for up front with no micro-transactions at all, for instance, XCom was about $20 a decade ago.

I have a feeling the console game ports will be pay up front, just like they are on a console.


I have a feeling the "console game ports" will die out just as soon as the Alien: Isolation and Tomb Raider ports did.


I think Apple's angle on this either should be or already is synergies. Because of AI and their nascent push into AR/VR, it appears to me at least that promoting gaming is one worthwhile prong in the campaign.

To keep investment in the platform strong, they stand to benefit from stabilizing and recovering from some of their NIH brain damage.

Will the fixation on collecting their cut come to an end? Time will tell.


My naive solution was to gather everything at one place before sorting everything and backing it up on a NAS. It was a lot of work but I didn’t find anything that could’ve helped me to accelerate the process so I did it manually. After having everything at a single place it was pretty straight forward though. I’m using directories to sort my stuff because at the end it’s independent of software and tags that might deprecate at some point. I’ve backed everything up using rsync.


Thanks for this. I feel somewhat overwhelmed myself. I am on device 1 of x. X because I actually don't want to know how many more i have to go though. I am manually copying things into 1 location. I also fear once done I will have to deal with deduplication, etc. I started with windows machine and found microsoft's robocopy. Supposedly its an improved version of xcopy. Still copying.........


That‘s what I use on Windows machines as well. I have to admit that I don’t care too much about duplicates as long as it’s not Gigabytes of dupes. There is software that might help with getting rid of duplicates (see Excire), the question is how much time it would take and how many TB of storage I could buy with the time lost. Outside of that: if images are meaningful to you, think about printing them out. It’s a different way of remembering the images and a printed out version feels different than digital. You don’t even have to hang them but touch them and go through them once in a while (I tend to not look through digital images ever after „archiving“ them). Good luck and don’t give up. It’s ugly for the first time but if you control the influx of new images in a meaningful way it‘ll get easier.


I was working with drones for a while and one issue with carrying weight was distance. If you want a drone capable of carrying weight it has to have a specific size to accommodate the heavy object as well as batteries that get heavier the longer you want to fly and the more power you need to transport said object. Outside of that rules about line of sight were a thing, so you couldn’t just let the drone fly a pre-programmed path but you also needed to see it. There is also a risk of being shot down. I think at the end of the day search and rescue or coast guards might use drones to deliver something very quickly if there is no other way but outside of that I see challenges that are rather hard to overcome.


Netflix was great but it got more crowded due to everyone wanting a piece of the cake. Now there are few shows or bunch of movies interesting to me that are either distributed evenly on multiple services or not available at my location at all. I’d be okay to pay as I go if there was at least one central way to access all content without ads and on demand but no one seems to be interested in that.


I would gladly make one-off purchases directly to studios/creators for specific titles


I want to do this too... But what's annoying is sometimes things don't come to VOD, just to a streaming service.


Jellyfin did so as well, they have transitioned to their own forums, too.


Wait, what? What would be the advantage of this? There must be a reason why this is done like that?


A reason? Yes.

A good one? No.


Can you elaborate or point me into a direction to read more?


Why do you think that the libraries that you have mentioned are not open source and what keeps you from using FOSS tools to label your data properly?


Do you have sources regarding an anti inflammatory effect of a keto and especially a carnivore diet? I‘m far from a medical expert so I’m genuinely interested.


Are they really gone though? Aren’t IEM still available for every budget?


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