• 6 Posts
  • 589 Comments
Joined 6 months ago
cake
Cake day: December 13th, 2024

help-circle

  • That’s a very good example of confirmation bias. I’m not saying that those workers weren’t a problem, but I am definitely saying you pointing out that they were “DEI hires” is confirmation of existing biases.

    If you hired bad workers, that’s the company’s fault. DEI doesn’t mean “hire any minority person”. DEI means don’t skip hiring someone because they’re a minority. It means when you find a qualified candidate, you should hire them, even if they’re black or a woman, for example. I’m sorry that your company seemed to misunderstand this. It’s a pretty common misconception, because conservatives want people to believe that DEI initiatives are something that they’re not. They want white men to believe that DEI initiatives are “taking away their jobs”.

    And just because someone is a white straight cis man doesn’t mean they’ll be a good worker. The majority of shitty workers I’ve seen were white straight cis men. That’s probably because the majority of workers I’ve seen were white straight cis men, and that’s how statistics works.


  • If someone is really sick of everyone calling them a racist, maybe the problem is actually them being a racist. I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve been called a racist in my nearly four decades of life, and every time it was by a conservative claiming I was being racist against white people. (I am a white man.) I am extremely opinionated and very open about my opinions. So the problem seems not to be that everyone with a loud opinion is labeled a racist.

    And yes, you were literally talking about racists not feeling able to express their opinions without consequences. I don’t view that as a problem. There should be consequences for expressing a racist opinion.

    It is rather telling though that nowhere in my comment did I claim that you are racist, but that’s how you interpreted it.





  • hperrin@lemmy.catoLinux@lemmy.mlJellyfin assistance
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    edit-2
    4 days ago

    So, Jellyfin is one of those apps where the Docker documentation is really lacking. I’m gonna give you my docker-compose.yml file in case it helps:

    services:
      jellyfin:
        image: jellyfin/jellyfin
        user: 0:0
        restart: 'unless-stopped'
        ports:
          - '8096:8096'
        environment:
          #- JELLYFIN_CACHE_DIR=/var/cache/jellyfin
          #- JELLYFIN_CONFIG_DIR=/etc/jellyfin
          - JELLYFIN_DATA_DIR=/var/lib/jellyfin
          - JELLYFIN_LOG_DIR=/var/log/jellyfin
        volumes:
          - ./config:/config
          - ./cache:/cache
          - ./data:/var/lib/jellyfin
          - ./log:/var/log/jellyfin
          - /data/jellyfin:/data/jellyfin
        devices:
          - /dev/dri
    

    For me /data/ is my RAID array, which is why my jellyfin data directory is there. Everything else goes in the same directory as the compose file. My system has a graphics card that does transcoding (Arc A380), so I have /dev/dri under devices.

    You should learn a lot about Docker Compose, because it will help you tremendously. I use Jellyfin behind an Nginx Proxy Manager reverse proxy. I’d highly recommend it. Here’s my compose file for that:

    services:
      app:
        image: 'jc21/nginx-proxy-manager:latest'
        restart: unless-stopped
        network_mode: "host"
        #ports:
        #  - '80:80'
        #  - '81:81'
        #  - '443:443'
        volumes:
          - ./data:/data
          - ./letsencrypt:/etc/letsencrypt
    

    Running in “host” mode is important, instead of just forwarding ports, because it lets you forward things to localhost, like pointing https://media/.[mydomain]/ to http://127.0.0.1:8096/ for Jellyfin.

    Anyway, best of luck to you, and I hope that helps!









  • That’s not weird in the sense that it’s unusual, because that’s so usual we have a term for it. And it’s really only weird if you consider it weird. There’s nothing wrong with finding comfort in a familiar object.

    I personally have a Game Boy Color my dad gave to me when I was recovering from surgery when I was 11. I keep it on my TV stand. I was incredibly distraught when I pulled it out of storage and the batteries in it had leaked all over the circuit board, damaging the board beyond repair. My dad actually got me another one on eBay that I harvested the circuit board from to replace mine. I don’t play it, but knowing that it now works and I could play it if I wanted to gives me comfort. I even put the old board in the other Game Boy just so I know that I still have all of the original parts.

    I think it’s probably something most of us do, and I don’t think you should feel any shame in it.






  • Warpinator is meant only to send/receive files and folders, and requires a supported device on both sides.

    QuickDAV lets you send/receive/manage files (meaning you can copy and move files on the host from the client). It doesn’t require a supported device in both sides, since it works with either a WebDAV client or a browser. So as long as one device can run QuickDAV, and the other has at least a browser, it’ll work. (QuickDAV works with a Sega Dreamcast!)

    Warpinator is incredibly easy to use. Open the app on both machines, select the other machine, select the file/folder, send.

    QuickDAV is a bit harder. Open the app on one of the machines, then type the information from the app into the client/browser on the other machine. Then you can download/upload/manage.