Yes, since before I was 10 (qwerty).. Learned it on an electric typewriter. Once a colleague switched two keys on my keyboard around as a joke. I hadn't noticed untill he told me about it three months later.
Oh certificates are so much fun and you have so many options. From fairly easy to mindboggling complex.
Your current solution is OK if you keep in mind security implications of distributing certs using scripts.
It is not entirely clear where you do your tls-termination but it sounds like that is the Caddy reverse proxy so that is where your certs should be.
Placing them in a location like /etc/ssl/example_com/ as fullchain.pem and privkey.pem is probably easiest. Make sure access rights are appropriate. Then point Caddy at them and it should work. I have no experience with Caddy itself though. If Caddy runs in Docker be sure to map the certificates into the container.
Mind that in this scenario the certificates are only on the Caddy server, connections from the reverse proxy to the services is unencrypted over http. You can't easily use the LE certificates on the services itself without some ugly split-horizon DNS shenanigans.
Alternatively you can set up a PKI with certificates for your services behind the reverse-proxy for internal encryption and do public tls termination in the proxy with Let's Encrypt.
WSL(2) was not Microsoft "being good". It was part of Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.
It was clear Linux won in the server world (not IIS). So why don't you run this lovely Linux as an app in our nice safe OS where we can keep milking you.
I've been using the Index with SteamVR for a few years and so far my experience is pretty good. Running it on an NVidia 1080TI and now 5070TI it works quite smooth. Some minor things aren't supported, like bluetooth (use a script to turn on/off the lighthouses) and the front camera's. But most games I've tried work out of the box in Proton. Performance was also good, even on a 1080TI.
Some games I've played wihtout much issue:
Beat Saber, Maestro (they messed up Index controllers, but that is a game issue), Gorn, Alyx, PoewrbeatsVR, Waltz of the Wizard, VRChat, Walkabout Golf, Boneworks and a few more I can't remember right now.
I've been using an Index with NVidia and never encountered this flickering. SteamVR has always worked flawlessly on most games. Except for controller issues but those are more on the game developer (only supporting/testing meta hw) and no support for bluetooth and the front camera's.
I haven't done this myself but maybe you can script something with OBS? It is made for screencapturing and it seems to work with Wayland according to the Arch Wiki.
Admitting you were wrong in a situation (or opinion) is a very mature and strong skill to have. It also makes communication and relations much more honest. A lot of people never learn this.
So, if you know you were wrong. Sincerely apologize. Then stop! No complaining, no blaming. And especially no bitching about being triggered. Being triggered is on you, not her.
If the conversation is going well enough you might be able to explain yourself a bit for mutual understanding. But for now it is on you to make up for the breakdown in communication. You don't have to be her friend, but you are both adults and need to work together in at least a professional courtesy. Save any feedback for a later conversation and try to keep emotions out of it.
Well, this seems in line with their whole Material 3 crapfest. I have a small personal SPA based on Angular Material 2. I've chosen some nice colours and use them troughout the site for a recognizable style.
With Material 3 you can pick a colour, or if you ask very nicely, maybe 5. And then the framework will generate the colours for the components. These generated colours are almost, but not quite, entirely unlike the colours you picked. Making your site look like an fugly mess.
Their grand "vision" is that they should match the content or whatever wallpaper the user has. So fuck you and your colours, we know better. It was quite a frustrating experiment and for now I'm back on Material 2 looking to switch to something better.
I don't know about AES67 but I've used Snapcast now for a few years and it works great. I use a central Mopidy service that streams to a few Snapcast clients connected to audio devices (not directly to speakers though). The clients run on normal PC hardware, Android and some on Pi's with DAC's from Hifiberry. The setup was very DIY but has been running very stable after that.
Yes, since before I was 10 (qwerty).. Learned it on an electric typewriter. Once a colleague switched two keys on my keyboard around as a joke. I hadn't noticed untill he told me about it three months later.