

Very interesting! Its a Woodblock.
Here is what woodblocks sound like.
Luckily for us, the song’s wiki page covers this.


Very interesting! Its a Woodblock.
Here is what woodblocks sound like.
Luckily for us, the song’s wiki page covers this.


Money is not overly abundant currently. Today we got a notice in the mail from our landlords that our rent is being lowered by 20 bucks a month (yes, you read that right, lowered) and we have been overpaying on our utilities so we’re getting some money back which, incidentally, can then go directly to our upcoming electricity payment haha.
That felt like things working out nicely out of the blue.


100% agreed. Why is this even possible
I’m sorry for being so productive you have a preference is a bit late for us ready for tonight and see what it says get on on the bike anyway and then we can do it right now.
That is AMAZING! Keep it up. I also lost almost 30kg a few years ago, and managed to stay in shape. I feel so much better since.
Congratulations!
That would be the plot to Transformers 3, not Transformers 1
Except the Shinkansen is a train?
That’s a name I’ve never heard before. I have heard of Tortoise SVN though.


Obviously they can’t. They place them on a pad, presumably a wireless charging & communication pad. Literally says in the article: “The pad wirelessly turns on the iPhone, runs the software update, then turns it off again.”
I do, a bit differently from what’s been mentioned here so far:
I actually host my server at home, running mailcow as my email-server-software of choice, and incoming emails do get delivered directly to my ISP-assigned IP via dynamically updated DNS records.
However: Outgoing email is delivered via an SMTP relay service, specifically Mailgun (I like them because for normal everyday email volume it’s free), because even when I was hosting the email server in a datacenter, it was impossible to not encounter deliverability issues.
Keplerbrücke repräsentiert.
Wirklich eine der übersichtlichsten Kreuzungen von Graz :)
But if he wanted that historical data for, say, making sure an ISP delivers promised bandwidth, then unless he’s constantly maxing out the connection, the usage graph is going to be fairly useless.
So you want the available bandwidth to be monitored in “real time”, but you don’t want constant speed tests to happen. Then you mention a script doing a speed test.
You’re gonna have to choose: Either you run some kind of Speedtest on a regular basis, which will give you somewhat “real-time” results, or you don’t do it, and you don’t have real-time data as a result.
A very quick google search brought up this power shell script, that even formats the results for PRTG:
Can we see them?