In the case of Denuvo, it is proven to drastically decrease performance for the sake of “security.”
Examples:
Hogwarts Legacy Denuvo vs Crack
In the case of Denuvo, it is proven to drastically decrease performance for the sake of “security.”
Examples:
Hogwarts Legacy Denuvo vs Crack
If you get the crack from a reputable source, you can trust it will be safe. A low seed torrent from a shady place (like The Pirate Bay) is probably a virus. High seed torrent from another source like 1337x or something with more active moderation is generally safe.
If you want to be extra sure, spin up a VM and install the crack there and check it out before doing it on your real machine.
Prowlarr is better than Jackett, especially for setting up Sonarr and Radarr.
Weird. If your RPMs increase during these slow downs then it’s from engine braking.
It could be that your car is downshifting for the uphill and then remains in that lower gear for the downhill, causing unintentional engine braking.
Are you using cruise control to set the speed? If so, it could be engine braking to keep it at the desired speed. Some cars do this, some don’t.
you’re on the piracy community… what do you expect to see here?
Ah, maybe it’s started up again.
I prefer Prowlarr because the UI is just like Sonarr and Radarr and it can synchronize your indexers to Sonarr and Radarr
torrents-csv.ml is excellent. It’s a compiled database of other torrent sites that is pruned of unseeded torrents. It usually has what I need except for new releases, as they aren’t added immediately.
Side note: Jackett is nice but Prowlarr is better. Jackett development has stopped. Prowlarr is a little bit more feature rich and can automatically add indexers to Sonarr and Radarr.
I used these a bunch in some jungle training. Any petroleum based jellies worked great, so we used bacitracin packets as our additive.
Fun fact: dead bamboo will always be dry in the middle between two joints. You can split it up into a couple thin pieces and it makes great kindling.
Live bamboo will create a small pressure bomb.
For torrenting, AirVPN is better for port forwarding.
A good VPN for torrenting would be AirVPN, as they offer port forwarding.
Check ipleak.net to see if there’s identifiable info coming through. Use their torrent check as well.
Corsair is a great choice. You’ll have plenty of head room, especially since their PSUs are known to handle higher loads than what they’re rated for
No, the host instance will not proliferate your input to other instances. Only your instance will have that and will only share it with other users from your instance.
e.g. I’m on Lemmy.world. I post on the Beehaw gaming community. Only other users from Lemmy.world will see my posts.
Federation can be a one way street. The problem with that is your comments and votes will only be visible from the instance you did it from. Lemmy.world will show other Lemmy.world users your comment but Beehaw will not ever see it, which means your comment will not proliferate to other instances either.
You can still browse content from an instance that has defederated yours but your actions will only be visible on your own instance.
Not typically but it can vary depending on which protocol and which provider you use. Best to check yourself using something like ipleak.net and see if there’s any identifying info on there while you’re connected.
Are you talking about a specific server or just Linux servers in general?
If you forward a port on your network (or VPN) and point your torrent software towards that port, you are now an “active” node. You can communicate with anyone else, forwarded or not.
If you leave it closed (passive node), you can only communicate with active nodes. With large torrents, this isn’t an issue because there’s more than enough active nodes to send the data.
Port forwarded: talk to anyone, even closed
Port closed: only talk to port forwarded people and hope that small torrents have someone with a forwarded port.
I just set mine up to be as close to RIF as possible. I love it so far.