Took me a second, but I got it. Lol
Took me a second, but I got it. Lol
Sounds like mold might be in their future.
You must be fun at parties.
A little dark humor is good for you.
I like how he gave a review of the jail and the food.
Also he and his son held up a gas station together so at least they had some family time together because he killed his son.
The question is are the beans in those cans normal size or are they giant sized?
So did he have a worm bin.
Yes but it has limitations/risks that could be a deal killer depending on your use case.
When a file changes externally, Nextcloud doesn’t know about the the changes until it looks at the file. It only looks when a user access that location within Nextcloud or during a automatic file scan.
The only time I have had issues with it is using a Nextcloud desktop client, as files are cached locally on the desktop and the client doesn’t live query the server when you view the files locally.
Changes made externally of Nextcloud won’t get updated on desktop clients until Nextcloud looks at the file an realizes a change happened.
This can be very annoying but also dangerous as you are at risk of editing an outdated file. For example if you edit a file via SMB and then edit the same file again on a desktop clients. The desktop clients won’t have the new file with the B changes. So you risk overwriteing the files with an old version.
You can add in local directory paths or file shares within your Nextcloud home directory.
I use that to access a local SMB share externally.
I guess you could also say The Machine. It/She kind of took on a personality.
Piracy Shield aka The Great Firewall of Italy.
Except when it is not…
For example Boost saves photo is some photo folder somewhere.
The only way i can find anything is using a photo app and scanning my entire phone to find things.
I will not hear such slander against the rotisserie chicken!
I haven’t played it most just read the news about it. But to me It maybe early access but it doesn’t sound like a subpar game.
They really went out on that chicken butt.
I guess you can stop paying your subscription.
But Isn’t that how all business works?
Customers pay for things and that payment pays to keep the business going.
It is just a fight to the faint, so it is totally fine.
I have been hosting random public services for years publicly and it hasn’t been an issue.
Edit, I might have miss understood the definition of public. I have hosted stuff publicly, however everything was protected by a login screen. So it wasn’t something a random person could make use of.