sorry about the amazing image quality I made this in less than a minute (I didn’t even export the image from the editor just screenshotted it lol)
Active on this account: https://sh.itjust.works/u/arudesalad@lemmy.funnyname.xyz
sorry about the amazing image quality I made this in less than a minute (I didn’t even export the image from the editor just screenshotted it lol)
Doesn’t python need colons after if/else/for/etc. statements?
Would charity count as gifting?
One of the mmo devs for a game I play did that. Game was unplayable for all of Christmas. They are never doing that again.
I am so tempted to buy the domain just to make it redirect to a rick roll
I was taught python by my school but I would rather write in other languages but the difference in formatting still gets me after years
It didn’t change anything for me…
The screenshot was taken less than 8 hours after the instance was up
Thanks, does it usually miss votes and comments then?
!selfhosted@lemmy.world on my instance:
and on sh.itjust.works:
It’s on the .57 machine and in the same docker environment as the proxy
I’m not sure if this is a response to my comment but the article I linked isn’t about setting a secondary dns, the fritz!box has a function that allows it to temporarily change the dns (usually to 8.8.8.8) if the specified dns isn’t working. It is separate from the “normal” dns settings.
https://fritzhelp.avm.de/help/en/FRITZ-Box-7530-AX-avme/avme/021/hilfe_internet_public_dns I found this guide for the fritz!box to set up a fallback dns, I think it should be on by default as it is on mine but I would read the article just to make sure
And crashing and burning in a production environment is an excellent thing to laugh at in 20 years
Also, could a reverse proxy be used to give cloudflare’s services to a port they don’t support?
So a reverse proxy is a way to manage subdomains? I read somewhere that it allows multiple different services to be hosted on the same port and I think I know that that is probably a lie.
I actually set up pihole today!
Chr prints the unicode symbol associated with the inputted value (in python). The team name uses several operators to have the inputted value be the amogus character