

Exactly. Here’s a thought… and I’m just spitballing here: tariffs. Then take them away. Then add them again. Then take them away. Then add them again. /s
Exactly. Here’s a thought… and I’m just spitballing here: tariffs. Then take them away. Then add them again. Then take them away. Then add them again. /s
Fast cutting is a well-known and widely used filmmaking technique:
This method creates a rhythm or pace that can heighten tension, convey action, or suggest urgency within a scene.
It’s often used to keep viewers engaged and emotionally connected to the content on screen.
https://filmlifestyle.com/what-is-fast-cutting-in-film/
Unfortunately, “content creators” know this too and use it to manipulate viewers.
deleted by creator
That’s what Emby thought.
I can’t read the word without thinking this.
Ah yes, Sharon Osbourne, the world-renowned philanthropist, human rights activist, and all-around class act.
Lol, “study”.
Conservatives invented censorship.
When in doubt, get hot and screw.
I see what you did there.
Confusing checkers and chess is on par with confusing Star Trek and Star Wars.
I have an extra chromosome. Do you want it?
I’ve never had that happen, but I suppose it’s possible.
In restaurants they keep plates warm under heat lamps. Microwaves don’t actually transfer heat the way heat lamps do. They heat things up by “vibrating” the molecules (it’s more complicated than that, but that’s the idea). Things with less rigid molecular bonds (like liquids) tend to heat faster because the molecules can vibrate more readily. Using the microwave dry can potentially damage things because there isn’t anything to absorb the microwave energy.
We have a name for that now.
DOGE?
Assuming your local service is accessible from the nginx server, you can proxy the request to it:
server {
listen 80;
location / {
proxy_pass http://10.100.100.2:3000/;
}
}
…where 10.100.100.2
is your local IP on the VPN and 3000
is the local port your service is listening on, and 80
is the public port your nginx server listens on. Everything that hits your nginx server at http://yourserver.com/
will proxy back to your local service at http://10.100.100.2:3000/
. Depending on what you’re hosting, you may need to add some things to the config.
I’m assuming that you are trying to proxy an http web server. If not, you’re going to have a hard time with nginx. Can you post your nginx config? Are you getting any response from nginx at all?
The cloud version is paid, but the desktop versions are free and available on the downloads page. Or you can build it from source.
Don’t forget to add some salt to that hash.