Looks like they have an official tutorial.
We're primarily a CentOS (6/7, kill me) and Rocky 8+ shop at work, with Debian handling our webservers. ~~My Boss~~ We like Rocky so much, it's even our base image for all of our containers (ugh).
My experience so far is that RHEL (and derivatives) are pretty solid, and not a bad choice. Though, I'd generally want to avoid the complexity that is SELinux in selfhost endeavors.
Make sure you dye your hair a fun color when you get to a comfy point with Rust, that way people know you're a serious Rust dev (/s).
If you'd be interested in another souls-like, I can recommend Remnant 2 (or the previous title) -- though, not the same combat style by any means.
We ran RocketChat at work for a few years before migrating to Teams.
RC could be good, but maintaining it long-term was an enormous pain. Maybe it's better now, certainly if you're using docker... But a manual install was always a laborious task on upkeep for us. Also worth making sure you don't need commercial features, as they've removed free features in the past to drive sales...
My brief experience with LINQ has also taught me to prefer this type of thing as well; though I still use regex on a daily basis most of the time, given my environment.
I don't know all of the regex rules (look ahead/behind, etc); but it's honestly not that bad. If you can learn the syntax for a programming language, you can learn the basics of regex..
I played the 2-3 demos before release, and have been continuing that trend since launch. "Nearly" at 100% achievements, though the remaining 3 are the big ones, so dunno how long it will take.
I have found that I enjoy the game more on low stakes (white/red), as the higher stakes are really just more annoying/RNG to me than anything.
Still, Stuntman will get me through.
If the Excel/CSV sheet is actually a CSV file, Import-Csv
in powershell will return the content as an array of objects, where each row is one element in the array.
Bit of a boring answer, but Gran Turismo 4 on the PS2 has stolen many hours off of my life.
Another honorable mention would be the rhythm game "Frequency".
A third, which isn't a game, is eJay Club World; though that's more of a DAW than anything.
Sorry, I didn't mean to come across in a condescending way, if that's how it read. I've only ever used
rclone
for Google Drive, and its been quite a while since I've personally set it up, as I no longer daily-drive linux (outside of WSL).Yes, following the documentation, you would run
rclone config
, then answer as follows:n
proton
protondrive
username@protonmail.com
y
to enter your password; then enter your password twice as prompted<Enter>
to skipy
This should create a proton-drive remote called "proton", which you can reference in further
rclone
commands. For example:In the past, I wrote a script to handle the check/sync job, and scheduled it to run with
crontab
, as it was easier for me to work with. Here's an example of the script to runrclone
using theproton:
remote defined above:If scheduling with
crontab
, runningcrontab -e
will open your user's schedule in the$VISUAL
,$EDITOR
or/usr/bin/editor
text editor. Here, you could enter something likeWhich would try to sync once every 30 minutes (crontab-guru).
This is also an option, assuming your system is using
systemd
; which most distributions have moved to -- you typically have to go out of your way to avoid it. I also don't have much experience in writing my own service/timer files; but it looks likesystemd-run
may have you covered as well (source):While I know writing config files and working with the terminal can be intimidating (it was for me in the beginning, anyway); I'd really recommend against running random 'scripts' you find online unless you either 100% trust the source, or can read/understand what they are doing. I have personally been caught-out recently from a trusted source doing jank shit in their scripts, which I didn't notice until reading through them...and Linux Admin/DevOps is my day job...