The Kentucky state library will give anyone a virtual library card. I also have cards from a couple nearby counties that have cooperative agreements with my local library. Libby makes you search each of them separately.
The Kentucky state library will give anyone a virtual library card. I also have cards from a couple nearby counties that have cooperative agreements with my local library. Libby makes you search each of them separately.
I’m pretty sure the state of Kentucky will let anyone get a card.
Would be nice if you posted the script to lemmy instead of a paste bin that deletes everything after a couple days.
The rats are beginning to turn on each other. This is good.
I’m driving a school bus. (just kidding)
I used zram + swap for years. I dedicated 25% of my memory to zram. The problem is that zram would get filled with infrequently used data, and disk swap would get the frequently used data. Once that happens everything slows down.
Zswap tries to fix that be creating a compressed swap buffer in memory. Older/less used data will get written to disk, but fresh/frequently used data will stay in the compressed ram buffer. That’s my understanding, at least. I don’t remember how to query Zswap usage stats.
It’s a compressed ram disk (virtual block device) that is often used for swap.
Again, this is not a boomer issue. I was told the same thing by Silents. I’ve only moved left-er.
The solution is stop upping population density in population dense areas.
This is completely backwards. Increasing population density means people can afford to live closer to work & resources. Low density means they have to drive 50 miles a day to get anywhere, and thus need more lanes.
27 is an odd number, do I assume the center lane switches direction for rush hour. That’s sure to fix it.
Who knows what Putin told them to get them to visit him? “All is forgiven & I want you to run the ministry of defense”.
The Kremlin has been paying for Wagner from the beginning. Wagner has always belonged to Putin. It’s mercenary status has just been a mechanism of plausible deniability.
An expected surprise? No such thing.