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18 votes
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California Governor Gavin Newsom "completely aligns" with Charlie Kirk on trans athlete issue, and agreed about restricting gender affirming care for prisoners and youths, in podcast
39 votes -
For decades, the Swiss city of Basel has been transforming its skyline, and now boasts some of the greenest rooftops in Europe
21 votes -
The Japanese mayor who built a floodgate no one wanted — and saved his town from a massive tsunami after his death
41 votes -
Grassroots clubs hold the key as Norway prepares for historic vote to scrap Video Assistant Referee at Norwegian Football Federation's annual general assembly
6 votes -
Reindeer movements are causing conflict in the Umeå region ahead of this week's Rally Sweden round of the World Rally Championship
3 votes -
Some residents say they were in the dark as Los Angeles fires spread with no evacuation order
9 votes -
Is Colorado's EV incentive worth it?
8 votes -
Eighteen months after Maui wildfires destroyed over 2,000 homes, only three have been rebuilt
26 votes -
New York starts enforcing $15 broadband law that ISPs tried to kill
51 votes -
Supreme Court seems ready to back Texas law limiting access to pornography
20 votes -
Texas sues Allstate Insurance over its collection of driver data
26 votes -
California fire facts
26 votes -
In 2023 the Danish city of Aarhus launched a three-year trial project to curb the number of disposable coffee cups – more than 700,000 were returned last year
10 votes -
Oslo leads in quiet, low-emission electric construction – drop in decibels is welcome side-effect of goal to keep city-managed construction projects free from toxic emissions
18 votes -
What robotaxis brought San Francisco
13 votes -
Why fire hydrants ran dry as wildfires tore through Los Angeles
23 votes -
These two cities used to be the same - London, ON vs Utrecht and difference between their infrastructural development
12 votes -
Massachusetts bill could fully legalize kei cars and override RMV ban
58 votes -
New California law prohibits using AI as basis to deny insurance claims
51 votes -
California will require insurance companies to offer coverage in wildfire zones
25 votes -
Pornhub is now blocked in almost all of the US South
53 votes -
More liquor stores in Oakland California are selling produce, thanks to Saba Grocers and City tax initiative (2021)
17 votes -
Louisiana forbids public health workers from promoting COVID, flu and mpox shots
33 votes -
US President Joe Biden administration grants California waiver to ban gas car sales in 2035
48 votes -
In a first, Arizona’s attorney general sues an industrial farm over its water use
26 votes -
As tourists discover Finland's Santa Claus Village, some locals call for rules to control the masses
9 votes -
AI slop is already invading Oregon’s local journalism
16 votes -
Costs from hurricane Helene more than $53 billion in North Carolina. Currently available funding is significantly less than that.
14 votes -
The women of the West are making political history — and have been for 130 years
4 votes -
Trans refugees turn to TikTok and Instagram for help fleeing red states
22 votes -
Oregon, USA introduces new statewide recycling rules to combat plastic waste
13 votes -
In Northeast D.C., a rancorous post-election fight erupts — over bike lanes
15 votes -
Scrapped policy to charge London’s drivers by the mile
4 votes -
After a unanimous local vote in 1996, the Swedish town of Växjö became the first in the world to commit to becoming fossil fuel free
14 votes -
New York Governor Kathy Hochul to relaunch congestion pricing with $9 base toll, sources say
15 votes -
What is the best or recommended way to integrate my Windows 10 and Linux computers through the local network?
There are currently four computers in my household: a Windows 10 desktop, a Windows 11 laptop, and two additional Linux laptops (those are "mine"). One is a very weak but new machine, basically...
There are currently four computers in my household: a Windows 10 desktop, a Windows 11 laptop, and two additional Linux laptops (those are "mine"). One is a very weak but new machine, basically the cheapest laptop I could buy that was neither Android nor literally a toy. It is running Lubuntu 24.04, and is used largely for writing and light browsing. The other is an older machine running MX Linux. Right now it's single purpose is running my Plex server. Given that setup, transferring files between machines is often a necessity.
Both my desktop computer and my Plex server are connected via Ethernet directly to the router. The other two laptops are connected largely via WIFI, although I do connect my writing laptop via an USB/Ethernet adapter for updates/upgrades and larger downloads when necessary.
Among other things, I often download movies on my Windows 10 desktop computer and then manually transfer them in batches to my Plex external hard-drive, and then to my Plex laptop (when it has enough space, otherwise I just keep the movies on the hard-drive). That is because it is way more convenient for me to (re)search what I wish to wwatch, find and download it to my desktop than it would be the case for my Plex laptop. The laptop is not only in a position that makes it uncomfortable to use but is also very slow even for basic things such as firing up Firefox. I also prefer to do the scraping using MediaElch and while it is a fairly heavy (probably Electron) application, my desktop is powerful enought that it doesn't make any diference. I also use Subsync sometimes, which is, as far a I know, only available as a GUI application on Windows.
Most content I find online is very practical, teaching me how to follow concrete steps to make things work, but I haven't found much advice on which programs or tech "stack" would be adequate for a specific situation such as my own. I just want a robust way to seamlessly transfer file between all the machines on my home without having to plug and unplug hard-disks and flash drives.
Any suggestion? Thanks!
13 votes -
What is happening outside the US?
Hello all. I feel like our US election upset (or victory depending on viewpoint) has really run wild on Tildes. I appreciate all the solidarity and encouragement from the non-US folks. I know for...
Hello all. I feel like our US election upset (or victory depending on viewpoint) has really run wild on Tildes. I appreciate all the solidarity and encouragement from the non-US folks. I know for better or worse it affects many of you as well.
While knowing these are special circumstances, I was thinking maybe folks feel a little left out or overshadowed by our drama.
Back before I had to go on a podcast diet, I really enjoyed the weekly updates from American Prestige because they would discuss important or interesting political/social developments and explain their implications.
So what's something happening where you are? How do you feel about it? What do you wish more people knew about it? It can be big or small. It does not have to be something political, just something important to you.
35 votes -
The world's most feminist city – how Umeå in Sweden became an idyll for women
7 votes -
No, raising the minimum wage does not hurt US fast-food workers
29 votes -
More US states ban PFAS, or ‘forever chemicals,’ in more products
38 votes -
Chicago built 50+ miles of new bike lanes, increasing cyclists by 119% and dramatically reducing fatal collisions
54 votes -
Goodbye, floppies - San Francisco pays Hitachi $212 million to remove 5.25-inch disks from its light rail service
30 votes -
Geothermal power in the North Bay
9 votes -
Florida threatens TV executive with jail time for airing ad in support of abortion rights
35 votes -
Hurricane Milton barrels toward Florida with 155 MPH winds
42 votes -
‘Paper or plastic?’ will no longer be a choice at California grocery stores
32 votes -
How to setup a local LLM ("AI") on Windows
12 votes -
Mozilla grants Ente $100k
31 votes -
Kentucky sues Express Scripts, alleging it had a role in the deadly opioid addiction crisis
15 votes