Obsidian looks interesting.
Obsidian looks interesting.
Thanks for the suggestion, but it seems like the challenges with Komga would be similar to those when using Mylar. I’ll probably just go for a spreadsheet.
That was my first idea too, but last I checked it didn’t scrape much other than English editions (using Comicvine AFAIR) and had no way of manually adding stuff it can’t scrape.
Scraping metadata. Wish/purchase/pull lists. Keeping track of multiple editions. Perhaps even scraping entire collections/storylines into manageable lists?
At the very least a quick way to use my phone to check if I already have a specific comic when I’m at the store.
Grist might be useful if I end up setting more than a spreadsheet up, thanks.
Thanks for the suggestion. I think that might be too much work for my needs though.
I played it as a kid with my buddies. We never understood the point of the game, but their clothes would fall off and that is kind of a big deal for little boys.
Then it does nothing.
It sources (includes) any file found in ~/.bashrc.d/ so check that directory.
You’re right ofcourse.
Check that you actually have persistent storage enabled. (See man journald.conf
and search for Storage
)
Read up on the numerous parameters to journalctl. (man journalctl
)
journalctl --boot -2
will show logs from previous boot.
journalctl --since "-2 weeks" --unit=sshd
last two weeks worth of sshd logs.
No, he’s not!
That all seems very, very strange.
I never craved a toaster or a color T.V.
MeowMeowBeets
I remember trying a Terminator joystick at a friend’s house on his C64. That was a very bad controller.
The container sees each volume as a seperate filesystem, regardless of your underlying disk setup and you cannot hardlink across filesystems.
That is not a very good circle, to be fair.
Sub7 existed before 2000 if I’m not mistaken.
Quiet down, you don’t want the bots or the AI scrapers to hear you.