Looks like they have an official tutorial.
Looks like they have an official tutorial.
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.
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.
I’m the sysadmin (and transitioning to DevOps) at work, but the DBs are 100% in control of our two devs (one of which being the head of IT).
Apparently we’re going to hire a third Dev, who will moonlight as our DBA – oh, and for 30K/yr.
I’m sure this will go well.
I’d still like to move to a dedicated condenser on a boom, but at least for the time being, the PC37X I bought off of Drop like 6 years ago still sounds great to both my ears & the other members in VC. Granted, the unit is starting to fall apart now (volume-dial adhesive failed, raise-to-mute works about 50% of the time, etc), so I need to replace it anyway…
Still playing through Remnant 2; trying to get all non-HC items on my original character, as well as work on an apocalypse clear.
Otherwise, does rewriting bash/powershell scripts count as gaming?
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:# Check if out of sync rclone check 'proton:' ~/proton 2>&1 | grep --quiet ' ERROR :' # Sync local/remote rclone sync 'proton:' ~/proton
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:#!/usr/bin/env bash # Ensure connected to the internet ping -c 1 8.8.8.8 |& grep --quiet --ignore-case "unreachable" && exit 0 # If in-sync, skip sync procedure rclone check 'proton:' "${HOME}" |& grep --quiet ' ERROR :' || exit 0 # Run sync operation rclone --quiet sync 'proton:' "${HOME}"
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):# Run every 30 minutes systemd-run --user --on-calendar '*:0/30' /home/your_user_name/proton-sync.sh
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…