I guess it depends on what you mean by "edited content."
I know you can't see my face but I just threw up in my mouth a little bit.
His tech bubble is clearly going to keep growing so why not invest now versus buying a full size case and all these extra hard drives and then realizing in a year or two that you really wanted a rack amount to begin with so you can expand even more?
Probably just easier to nix the Prime subscription and just download scene releases... Most of them are h265 these days and are released same day as on Prime.
I just checked a list of "new to prime" and my tracker and they were all there. No reason to give money to Amazon.
On what grounds?
See the US Constitution...
If you're dealing with this much storage, it's time to upgrade to a rack. Don't deal with having to shove 10 drives into a packed full-size.
Start scouring 2nd hand auction sites and buy one used. They're pretty cheap as far as solutions go if you can grab them used. Something like this would be ideal: https://www.silverstonetek.com/en/product/info/server-nas/RM22-312/
It's pretty great. The only thing you have to remember is that the caddy instance and the container you're proxifying have to be within the same docker network. So you'll definitely want to use the caddy2 container if this is the setup you want to pursue.
If not then you can just use IP addresses inside or outside of a container it doesn't matter.
I very highly recommend that you take the time and just switch. Caddy is simply fabulous. It's designed to work (assuming it's compiled with the module) with containers and use docker networks for routing. It makes it easy to spin up containers and directly reference the container names instead of remembering IP addresses and particularly comes in handy when your entire environment is containerized.
You can pull the caddy image and run it in docker and as long as your environment is configured correctly you can simply reverse_proxy @container
and you're done. Caddy pulls all the relevant port information directly from the container API.
I get such a nerd boner thinking about it.
There's not though. Illegal is a poor choice of words because the only one that can determine that is the Supreme Court. I can see why they used defying legal limits.
Light + TIF https://sky.rethinkdns.com/1:AAkACAQA
Normal + TIF https://sky.rethinkdns.com/1:AAkACAgA
Pro + TIF https://sky.rethinkdns.com/1:AAoACBAA
Pro plus + TIF https://sky.rethinkdns.com/1:AAoACAgA
Ultimate + TIF https://sky.rethinkdns.com/1:gAgACABA
Light + TIF https://dns.dnswarden.com/00000000000000000000048
Normal + TIF https://dns.dnswarden.com/00000000000000000000028
Pro + TIF https://dns.dnswarden.com/00000000000000000000018
Pro plus + TIF https://dns.dnswarden.com/0000000000000000000000o
Ultimate + TIF https://dns.dnswarden.com/0000000000000000000000804
Light https://freedns.controld.com/x-hagezi-light
Normal https://freedns.controld.com/x-hagezi-normal
Pro https://freedns.controld.com/x-hagezi-pro
Pro plus https://freedns.controld.com/x-hagezi-proplus
Ultimate https://freedns.controld.com/x-hagezi-ultimate
TIF https://freedns.controld.com/x-hagezi-tif
Rethink DNS, DNS Warden, and ControlD with Hagezi blocklists via DoH/3. I highly recommend the '+ TIF' as they are threat intelligence feeds which are up to date lists of bad actors/malware.
No actual professional company or job of value is not going to check your curriculum or your work history.... So like sure you may get that job at quality inn as a night manager making $12 an hour because they didn't fucking bother to check your resume...
But you're not getting some CS job making $120,000 a year because they didn't check your previous employer. Lol
pay for school
do anything to avoid actually learning
Why tho?
Article III, Section 1:
Yet another armchair expert that's literally never taken the time to read the Constitution, which again, establishes the US Supreme Court as the highest court in the land vesting in it, supreme judicial power. So why don't you do yourself a favor and Google what "judicial power" means...
Congress has the power to make anything into law that they want, regardless of the legality of it. It comes down to the SCOTUS to interpret whether or not the law is indeed legal and enforceable. That is a power vested singularly in the SCOTUS by the US Constitution.