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Working knowing there’s a cocktail filtering that will be waiting for me at the end of the day sounds like a nice way to survive the day 😆
Working knowing there’s a cocktail filtering that will be waiting for me at the end of the day sounds like a nice way to survive the day 😆
Here’s our current plan at lemmy.nz: https://canvas.fediverse.events/#x=179&y=311&zoom=1&tu=https%3A%2F%2Flemmy.nz%2Fpictrs%2Fimage%2Fa36e6529-23d8-496d-9f42-bce60efa3850.png&tw=114&tx=100&ty=300
Looks like we might be a bit more ambitious than others 😆. We had good participation last time though.
That’s really cool. I’m going to have to give this a go some time.
Wow, that’s quite the process!
My link talks about how it’s popular with bartenders. How does the process work at a bar, when a customer probably doesn’t want to wait 2.5 hours for a drink? Would bars mix up big batches ahead of time?
Looked up the process. It looks like the idea is you add milk (or I guess in this case cream) to the mixture and make it curdle, then filter out the curds with a coffee filter, cheese cloth, etc.
Explanation here.
It would be nice if OP clarified (pun intended) the process for this cocktail. Do you just mix all ingredients? Is the order important?
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So you keep an encrypted backup at work with the decryption key at home, and an encrypted backup at home with the decryption key at work?
But if your encryption keys to your offsite backup are on-site only, doesn’t that make your offsite backup worthless in the case where “offsite” is important?
If your house burns down, you don’t have your encryption keys to your only backup.
Stardew Valley is casual, low stress, with heaps of content.
For quick few minutes I’ve recently been into Pirate Solitaire which is on F-Droid.
This says there are fat naked mole rats, but it says their role is to connect to other naked mole rats communities by digging when the ground is soft from rain. That’s quite different from the claim that their role is to block the tunnels to stop them flooding.
Not OP, I couldn’t find a paper. Just this site that makes the same claim almost word for word, and cites a youtube video of a lecture at Stanford. I didn’t watch the video, but this seems best described as a “plausible” explanation rather than a proven fact.
Oh I didn’t thing about access points. With something like ZigBee, the switches add to the network range. But for WiFi, each switch will need to be in range of an access point. We have pretty decent coverage but the benefit of using ZigBee is other devices can take advantage of the extended network.
Others have talked about Zwave, I’m not sure which camp they sit in.
Interestingly. I was a bit worried about adding dozens of new WiFi devices but it sounds like it’s not an issue so I will consider the WiFi switches after all.
Sweet, I was a bit wary of WiFi switches but maybe I’ll consider them after all
I was under the impression that WiFi could only handle so many devices connected. 20 years ago if you got more than 10 or 20 some would start getting kicked off. Maybe that was my short router. Is that never an issue with modern routers? Even adding hundreds?
How do WiFi switches do when you have a lot? Is it an issue to put in 50 WiFi switches, wouldn’t that overload the network?
And here I was thinking it was: F U, yep.
DNS is when your browser asks where to find a website. You enter Lemmy.One in your browser, and your browser asks the DNS resolver the address of the computer the website is hosted on.
Most people will use their internet company’s DNS, and it sounds like France ordered these companies to block some illegal streaming sites by having the DNS server point to a page saying it’s blocked instead of to the website server.
More technical users changed their settings to get DNS from google, Cloudflare, etc instead of the internet company, so now France is going to make those companies block the sites too.
ELI5: France is lying to your computer when it asks where to find the websites
Ah, right, thanks!