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While I use LibreNMS as it uses SNMP for monitoring (which is pretty much available everywhere), I don’t believe it has http alerts, but I know for a fact that it can send Telegram messages.
That seems legit to me.
DRM content is usually encrypted and only decrypted through some proprietary plugins, so you have to agree to use these plugins if you want to watch these videos.
This is the same mechanism that Netflix and Disney+ use and it helps them by not letting you download movies to your computer.
Ironically, stowman is a bash script whose only purpose is to wrap git and stow so that you only need a couple of very simple commands in order to manage dotfiles, the automation (i.e. the synchronization task) doesn’t seem to be a part of stowman.
For GBA, give a look at:
Super Monkey Ball Jr. (A classic)
Chu Chu Rocket! (Chill puzzle)
IMO, ASRock.
Considering that they’re probably the only mobo manufacturer that officially supports using consumer AM4 CPUs on a server (see ASRock Rack), and always supported ECC ram on all AM4 motherboards - and that I haven’t had anything negative happen with any of their products so far (at work) - I personally would choose ASRock next.
Haven’t had the chance to try them for AM5 yet, sadly.
This and the “Cast youtube video to TV” without an external bridging software
It’s not as much of a port as it is a spin-off / prequel.
Sorry for being pedantic, my point is that VCS is also available on PS2, so by definition it’s not a port.
No PC version though, sadly.
I have been using exfat since it has support for big ISOs and is compatible with Linux.
The ST400 does NOT support ext4, but I didn’t care much: I wanted a partition scheme that was accessible from both Windows and Linux.
I don’t recall ever having to change the firmware for that, nor for NTFS which I have used the very first time when testing it out.
For my use case, I am using a cheap 120G ssd on which I only keep ISOs, so I never found myself needing multiple partitions…
Edit: The documentation does say that it supports multiple partitions, but again, I never tested that out, so YMMV…
Hope this helps.
Take a look at the IODD ST400.
It’s a hardware solution to your problem: you put multiple isos on an ssd, plug your ssd into the ST400, then plug the ST400 into the computer you want to live boot from (through USB).
From the ST400 you can quickly swap the active ISO, and it acts like a virtual DVD drive to the target computer, and you’re basically ejecting and inserting a new DVD every time you do so.
You can also mount it for RW operations (ie. for inserting new ISOs without having to remove the SSD), for which it acts like a regular usb disk - but I recommend using it usually in RO mode to avoid data corruption.
It’s not that user friendly, but once you get used to it, it’s a perfect multiboot tool to have in your belt.
Yeah, I just realized my mistake and attempted to delete my comment before anyone else could see it… no luck this time.