I recently read an actual scientific study that found a direct correlation between smell and the length of armpit hair. So your unscientific hypothesis is actually backed by science. I’m too lazy to look up the source though.
I recently read an actual scientific study that found a direct correlation between smell and the length of armpit hair. So your unscientific hypothesis is actually backed by science. I’m too lazy to look up the source though.
This is a great description! I agree, a meteor large enough to destroy a small country is massive!
I’m curious, how would you setup a docker swarm to scale the cpu when needed?
I’m not exactly sure how many queries, but it’s above the free limit. I purchased the pro plan. For $20 a year and it’s been a great service for me. I can send a referral code for 30% off (I think). I think adguard has a similar service.
I don’t think this accomplishes what he wants. The router DHCP will assign the second DNS address as you mention, but the devices will select one at random, not as a backup/failover. So what happens is that devices sometimes go through the Pi-hole and sometimes go through the secondary DNS address and receive ads. The only real way I’m aware of is to have a second pi-hole for redundancy. Personally, I decided to use a cloud based service (NextDNS) for this exact reason. I didn’t want my families internet to rely on devices that I host.
An option for you. Setup a WireGuard server on your network and use the WireGuard mobile app to use that VPN connection when not connected to your home WiFi. Then you’re always using the internet through your pihole. That’s how I have mine setup and it works well.
I have a similar setup to the above. Personally I use Docker Compose and backup up my compose scripts to the NAS.
If that’s the actual name of the fruit, why wouldn’t it be marketed under that name?
I believe it is already on Tor. But not everyone knows how to use tor, so they also have traditional domains.
From our friend ChatGPT:
Certainly! You’re on the right track with your idea of selecting a style first and then selecting a random question based on that style.
Here’s how you can structure this on Perchance:
style
Decriver ou expliquer au present
Raconter au passé
[... more styles ...]
tipsForStyle
[style:Decriver ou expliquer au present]
Tip for this style: [Tip for Decriver ou expliquer au present]
[style:Raconter au passé]
Tip for this style: [Tip for Raconter au passé]
[... more tips for each style ...]
questionsForStyle
[style:Decriver ou expliquer au present]
Où travaillez-vous?
Où vous situez-vous au travail?
[... more questions for this style ...]
[style:Raconter au passé]
Comment votre travaille a affecté par la pandemie ?
Durant votre carrière, qu’est-ce qui a été le plus satisfaisant jusqu’ici?
[... more questions for this style ...]
output
<h1>[title]</h1>
<h2>[title2]</h2>
<h3>[title3]</h3>
<h4>[title4]</h4>
[style]
[questionsForStyle]
[tipsForStyle]
<div>
**[output]**
</div>
With this structure:
You can further modify and expand upon this structure to customize the output to your liking!
It honestly really depends what your needs are. This is a bit like asking what the best car is. A Ferrari is nice and fast, but wouldn’t be great for a dumpster hauling service. What platform(s) or tech stack are you planning on running?
Honest question. Why should it be? Isn’t the actual print of the book a very small fraction of the cost? The majority of the cost is the IP. If for example a book is $50 and the book costs $1 to print are you saying that it should be $49 and that’s the point that would convince you to purchase?
Out of curiosity, how do you accomplish that?
That last paragraph is great advice. I get so frustrated at times. Sometimes it feels like I need to fix things ASAP when I’m reality it doesn’t matter. In many cases coming back with fresh eyes helps considerably.
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