Haha I was just about to post an update as well. Great minds are timed correctly it seems!
We upgraded from v0.19.3 to v0.19.5. The release notes for v0.19.4 have all the goodies, v0.19.5 was more of a hotfix update. I will post links below to those. We also upgraded to postgres v16 which should quell some of the memory leaks we have been having causing unresponsiveness and slow performance (we’ll see I’m still unsure if this will pan out.)
Thank you for the patience everyone!
https://join-lemmy.org/news/2024-06-19_-_Lemmy_Release_v0.19.5_-_A_Few_Bugfixes
You might be interested in the documentary “It’s Quieter in the Twilight” about the engineers who keep the Voyagers alive.
They’re back up, thanks for the heads up!
What is that music app?
This was my favorite quote from the article.
But neither of those books was actually checked out from the Hayden Library on his trip. One of the books was checked out from another library, and another was stolen off the shelves. Norris refused to return the books at first, and Alexa Eccles, the executive director of the Community Library Network, told me in a phone call that, when Norris eventually returned them, the barcodes had been cut out of the book covers, and the library has not been able to return them to circulation or get new copies.
Ah yes. I should have put that in the release notes. It was removed from the API unfortunately. There’s an issue here asking for it to be reimplemented. https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/4215
If your third party app experience is feeling a little funky, you just need to sign out and in. Looks like session termination wasn’t handled correctly in some apps.
See you on the other side everyone.
Beeper Mini registered your phone number with Apple and connected directly to the iMessage servers. That version was killed after three days of usage. The mac mini farm still works but that’s just through an apple ID email address.
iOS 17 uses a small gpt-2 based model for predictive text.
Did you read the article further than the title? It’s just a bunch of quotes from people going through the new process. The title is egregious but the content is helpful in understanding why teachers/school admin are frustrated.
It’s an option in all states to receive books that some legislators have declared illegal in their states.
EDIT: I think there’s a misunderstanding between us here. The only issue I’m picking here is that no matter if they made the right choice or not, they did cave/give into the hardliners. Will this choice help book fairs continue and scholastic to make money, definitely. Did they cave though, also I think so.
This situation is just so sad.
They could have at least made this “controversial” collection of books opt-out instead of opt-in.
Yes. It’s opt-in to receive the books tagged as controversial by them.
The layoffs are related to the sale of Bandcamp to Songtradr.
https://variety.com/2023/music/news/bandcamps-layoffs-songtradr-1235758123/
If the choices are to continue to sell these books at book fairs and to not sell them and they are now allowing schools to not sell them, it seems like they caved, correct?
So for transparency sake for the backups we are using dockerized restic with a script that dumps the database and encrypts and uploads to backblaze b2 for us automatically at 5am UTC.
I have it configured currently to
So we have a nice range of restore points if needed.
Teenage Engineering is a hardware design firm that Nothing contracts with for hardware design. They aren’t a division of Nothing and they don’t work on just earbuds.