

Most search engine bots publish a list of verified IP addresses where they crawl from, so you could check the IP of a search bot against that to know.


Most search engine bots publish a list of verified IP addresses where they crawl from, so you could check the IP of a search bot against that to know.


Actually I think most search engine bots publish a list of verified IP addresses where they crawl from, so you could check the IP of a search bot against that to know.


I’ve, once again, noticed Amazon and Anthropic absolutely hammering my Lemmy instance to the point of the lemmy-ui container crashing.
I’m just curious, how did you notice this in the first place? What are you monitoring to know and how do you present that information?


A pi with multiple terabytes of storage?
What do all you guys use these setups for?
Very strange that such a change could lead to such a problem, but sometimes databases are weird black boxes like that 🤷
Thanks for all the work!
What was the bug in the end out of curiosity?


Thanks for all the work!
Agreed, I would definitely not refer to the first one as self hosting without qualifying further.


There’s a setting under Power/Battery on my phone to allow an app to run in the background, which makes it so it doesn’t get stopped. @mariah@feddit.rocks maybe that would help you?


The convention in many Rust projects is usually that before 1.0, the patch version behaves like the minor version and the minor version behaves like a major version. So once there are breaking changes, they go to 0.20.0.


According to Steam’s own survey, Linux is still less than 2% of the user base and it doesn’t look like it’s changing much. I don’t know how it has looked historically though but probably not too much different.
Realistically speaking, it’s only a small percentage of people who bought the Steam Deck, and they probably already had a gaming PC, which means they probably had a Windows PC.
So unfortunately, I don’t think Linux gaming is anywhere close.


Convincing analysis. I guess the question is, if we assume this is the case, will the industry ever heal?


Yes that is true - although many games on Steam can play offline so because I download the game, I own it in that fashion. They can’t take that away.
But compare with GOG then. They sell games, you download them with no DRM so you own the download essentially.


rights expire for TV shows and movies far more often than they do for games
Any idea why there is this discrepancy between TV and games?


Why is licensing so easy with games though? It really seems like there’s this arbitrary difference in how the video games and streaming industries work.


What would it take to get a “Steam but TV/movies instead of games”? I feel like if I could see reviews of movies and I could buy them and download them and have them forever and buy them on sale and all that good stuff, it wouldn’t be so bad.
How come none of the streaming services have gone for this model? Steam is swimming in money, surely this method could work?
Maybe look into https://nginxproxymanager.com/ it makes it quite easy to set up.
Also your avatar and the image posted here (not the thumbnail) seem broken - I wonder if that’s due to Anubis?