Okus

joined 2 years ago
[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 5 days ago (1 children)

How are you feeling with frostpunk? I felt like everything was too small and the trackpad controls were not very comfortable compared to my imagined use of a mouse?

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 4 months ago

Sorry for the wall of text, but I saw your other comment about the jujitsu mma being good self defense. I would argue that it has inflated its reputation due to its prevalence in tv mma as a winning style. It is very good for what it does with submissions, but only so far as the rules protect the fighters. The best way to get out of a grapple is break a finger or gouge an eye or an elbow drop to the base of the spine… no one wants that in an organize fight. This is their job, so the rules thankfully protect them against that. And in a self defense scenario with 2 people, you really don’t want to take 1 to the ground and hope the other guy just stands there. Best defense is going to be to get out of there.

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (1 children)

The most important thing is going to be a kind of vibes check. I had a similar question from a friend so I already had this written up:

Good questions to ask:

what are the last 5 injuries that happened to your students and when? And are they still training?- injuries happen but this question should help you know how often they happen and maybe why/ some places might not take care of their people as much

What are all the fees I should expect to pay: monthly? Belt testing? Tournaments? Weapons? Uniform?

Are there any kids around thier age training?- training with friends will help you keep going

How many black belts do you have that train regularly?- this one is a sign of a health dojo because getting a black belt is really just the first step, honestly after black is where all the cool stuff starts happening

Also most places will allow you a free class or two or at least to watch.

For my recommendation, which has 19 years of bias within karate. (I know super bias) Taekwondo- it would not be my first recommendation. In the US tends to be much more fitness and sport than art. You find a good Korean who knows their stuff, great… most that I’ve seen are white dudes walking around as 10th degrees in their 30s for some reason.

Jujitsu/mma- I would generally advise against it mostly due to the types of meatheads it attracts. Not saying it’s bad, but it’s not my preference or recommendation. Also super easy for said meatheads to give your arm/knee some extra juice and now you are dealing with a sprain or worse. (Our saying was 2 most dangerous students were white belts and black belts but for very different reasons)

Kung fu- I have a lot of respect for the art and style that I’ve seen in a lot of kung fu schools and even trained in tai chi myself for some time. The art as well as the self defense are strong. I would recommend kung fu the most of these 3 schools in your area just by style alone.

All that said it depends on if the school itself is good and if your kid is going to have fun and keep up with it. Also considering you trained as a kid, you might want to pick it back up with your kid. There are very few activities that you and your kid could start together. I saw it many times families of different ages starting at white and going to black. It’s a unique opportunity that doesn’t happen in a lot of other things, soccer, baseball etc.

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago

That’s fair. I only learned about PWA because of a combo of Lemmy and SilverBullet

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Isn’t PWA better in most cases?

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago

That’s good. I heard about Godot after unity enshittified

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago

Awesome. This is something I have never done either, so this would be cool to consider/add.

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

This is great. I knew there would be self taught people. What hooked you? Did you just always tinker around.

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 year ago

Thanks, I’ve not seen that. I’ll see about sharing it. And yeah I’m not trying to hard, just a nudge and a point in a direction.

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah I absolutely understand it will come down to his actual interests and motivations. I think these are interesting resources and I will do my best to try to pass along what I can do him. The libraries around here probably have some good resources too that I can investigate.

 

Hey community, I’ve got a friend about to graduate high school. He has had a bit of an uneven path in life, and I would like to help inspire him to focus on something in tech/programming/etc.

He is a smart kid, but doesn’t have a lot of good examples in his life. I think he believes his options are to just get a job at a restaurant or store.

I helped him build his first pc a few months ago. I tried to convince him to install Linux, but he was concerned it might be too complex for a computer he wanted to game on or do music editing. I didn’t push too hard. I know he has been doing a lot of modded games and stuff lately. And he seemed open to testing out Linux on old laptop.

He is smart and I would like to encourage him to either look into pc building or programming. But neither is my field, so I want to know what are good on ramps into programming and open source. What are Blogs, youtubes, or even should I recommend an associate degree at the local community colleges? (I would recommend full college degrees but I think he has some family situation which might make that hard).

All my knowledge feels like osmosis in the last year of being on Lemmy and now I have a Linux server with 20+ self hosted docker apps… but I realize I’m just hacking things together, not developing anything. I just want to show him there is another path he could pursue other than retail.

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Well it’s just a tiny Linux server I made in my house, it stays within my network.

[–] Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 2 years ago (4 children)

Ok thanks. I have created /mn, but now it prompts for a password for root@//192.168.69.69/sharedmain

But I didn’t set a password

18
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 

I need help understanding what the community’s recommendation is for how to save my files across two pcs without having to manually cut and paste or setting up a NAS.

My situation is that I have a Linux server running Opensuse pulling down media through an Arr stack setup. It only has .5 TB available but I have a Windows PC with 3 TB available. I would like to know if there’s a way that I can seamlessly direct my Linux server to save onto my windows PC without me having to manually copy and paste.

Let’s say I initiate a download of a .75TB file on my Linux server, can I just have it save directly to my available 3TB windows PC? And then be also able to tell an app like Jellyfin to read it from there?

Long term I was thinking that I would set up a separate NAS but I don’t want to do that for a few months. I want to stabilize my current setup before adding another machine.

Am I crazy to think that I can save files to my windows computer from my Linux server? I have tried to look into different things. I started going down the route with samba, but it seems to only show files to my windows PC but not actually save them there directly from Linux. I’ve looked into FTP/SCP but I don’t know a good guide or if would do what I need. I am struggling understanding the networking portion of this, so let me know if I am wrong.

As a secondary question, if I had a NAS, could I also point some of that free 3TB from the windows pc to be used as part of the NAS?

Edit: I struggled a lot with this and ultimately got scared away from it for the connectivity reasons mentioned below. I ended up figuring out how to mount an external drive using fstab. This should meet my short term goals. Thanks all!

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