I'm reading through this thread and I'm surprised that there are actually quite a few of us who have trouble waking up their PCs.
I may have solved mine by increasing my swapfile from 2GB to 16GB. So far it hasn't been an issue for me for an entire week. It usually kicks in every 2-3 days.
I was experiencing a similar issue, and I may have fixed it by expanding my swapfile from 2GB to 16GB. I usually start having wake issues every 2-3 days, but I'm officially on my first full week without any issues since expanding my swapfile.
Tbh, that's partially the reason why I opened your thread: to find recommendations lol. I've been procrastinating and haven't found some good alternatives yet. But looking at what others are responding with, it's probably best to give those a try.
Duplicati is a good backup tool, period. As in, it's literally just good at backups. When it came to restoring, it took me I think 3-4 days to restore around 419 GB of files.
I highly recommend you ditch Duplicati and look for something else. Or if you manage to figure out a fix, try restoring your files before you actually need it.
And another tip is that when creating your backup, you should copy the database file Duplicati creates onto a separate drive. For whatever reason, Duplicati puts its database files on the same drive you're trying to backup. So when it comes time to restore, it wants you to grab the database file from your dead/corrupted storage drive.
That's the neat part. Why make it if you could just buy it? All it takes is for a rich authoritarian asshat with too much money and a desire to push an agenda.
That would result in a mass exodus of their users and potentially result in their competitor popping up. Imagine the 2023 Reddit API controversy, but things going a lot worse for Reddit. Had Reddit taken a more extreme approach and made it entirely impossible to use any 3rd party apps instead of permitting workarounds for users to modify their apps, then they would've lost a lot of relevancy and would actually have suffered financially.
The smart way to do this would be to slowly implement anti-user practices over a long period of time, and let your corporate bootlickers gaslight the rest of the users into thinking that everything is fine and that they're only overreacting.
From reading their rules, they don't prohibit NSFW content.
We should use the death of LemmyNSFW as reminder to spread communities across as many instances as possible so something like this won't happen again at the same scale.
Because right now, if Lemmy.World goes down, then we're absolutely fucked.
It takes a few tries before the anti cheat message went away for me. But it'll still come back eventually. I would suggest not using your main account.
an error except when you launch through Steam
Isn't that expected? The Steam login shouldn't work unless you use Steam.
Screenshots can be easily manipulated by Inspect Element. Like for example:
There's no way for us to authenticate OP's claim with 100% certainty unless we had access to Reddit's backend and could verify the comment history directly.
Plus, this story was told entirely from OP's perspective. Can we verify with 100% certainty that that was exactly what was said? Are we for certain that OP didn't say anything else? How do we know if the full sentence wasn't "Go back to the muscovite empire and I hope your entire family gets raped"?
And how do we know Reddit didn't see a larger pattern of TOS-breaking comments and simply included one excerpt in the ban notice to OP? I know for Reddit moderators, they're restricted to being able to include only one single rule-infringing comment in a ban notification sent to users, even if multiple messages were problematic. I wouldn't be surprised if Reddit admins had the same limitation.
That's why I always take "I got banned by Reddit admins" posts on the Fediverse with a grain of salt. There's too much missing information to judge. OP might be telling the truth, or they might not. I don't have enough evidence either way, so I'll reserve judgment and move on.
I'm reading through this thread and I'm surprised that there are actually quite a few of us who have trouble waking up their PCs.
I may have solved mine by increasing my swapfile from 2GB to 16GB. So far it hasn't been an issue for me for an entire week. It usually kicks in every 2-3 days.