[-] romano@lemmy.shtuf.eu 1 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

The model in question has metal screw bosses.

That's pretty cool. I wish more devices had brass inserts. I kinda hate the idea of screwing into plastic. Anyway, do whatever you feel you need. I don't think it'd get loose even with daily usage, but I might be wrong.

[-] romano@lemmy.shtuf.eu 1 points 7 months ago

What does that solve? Isn't the whole purpose of a threadlocker to keep the screw in place? I can imagine that plastics are soft enough that they keep the screws in place on their own. As far as I know, and from my own experience, there's been no trouble with screws loosening over time in those consoles, so I don't know how adding threadlocker would help.

[-] romano@lemmy.shtuf.eu 1 points 7 months ago

If you're running it in docker you can just check the logs, I do it like this: docker compose logs -f lemmy, and see if you have requests from any instance in the log stream. For me it goes pretty fast, but you can always ctrl+c to exit and scroll up to see what you've missed. Might not be the most optimal way, but it works for me.

[-] romano@lemmy.shtuf.eu 1 points 11 months ago

I've got a whole 0.5kg bag of coffee for that much in Germany, and that'll last me almost a month (~25 cups). What's so good about Starbucks that it costs as much per cup?

[-] romano@lemmy.shtuf.eu 1 points 1 year ago

AndOTP is no longer maintained. I'd suggest switching to something still supported, like Aegis for example.

[-] romano@lemmy.shtuf.eu 1 points 1 year ago

Ironically Nitter stopped working lately, since Twitter started requiring users to be logged in to read anything.

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romano

joined 1 year ago