keksbaecker
@keksbaecker@lemmy.world
- Comment on Would you pick her up? 6 days ago:
This doesn’t excuse her crimes in any way, but damn, her early life sounds really awful and nothing anyone should go through.
- Comment on Would you pick her up? 6 days ago:
Do you have a list or even a recommendation? I would like to watch them. For the plot of course. 😉
- Comment on Would you pick her up? 6 days ago:
Yes, that could really work. As long as she is the killer and not just the lure for the male killer.
- Comment on Would you pick her up? 6 days ago:
I’m not sure how good the concept would work in „serious“ horror movie, but I could definitely see it as part of a „Scary Movie“-type parody.
- Comment on Would you pick her up? 6 days ago:
That seems to be the sad reality and it basically is the non-consent variant of the porn plot.
- Comment on Would you pick her up? 6 days ago:
Yeah, that is probably how the plot would go.
- Comment on Would you pick her up? 6 days ago:
I think, that I would pick her up. After all how many horror movies are there where the sexy, female hitchhiker is actually the serial killer?
- Comment on Keeping .yaml files up to date... 1 month ago:
Thank you for this idea. I wasn’t aware, that you can subscribe to an rss feed for releases on gitlab/github.
I think that I will follow your approach.
- Comment on Jellyfin on rootles docker access to encrypted drive 8 months ago:
I’m not 100% on the paths regarding the mounts and where the containing files are accessible, but it looks correct to at the moment. One way to test this is to check if the user you are using to run the Jellyfin container is able to access the files without additional input/steps.
If your user can access it, then Jellyfin will be able to do that as well as soon as you have mounted it in the container.
- Comment on Jellyfin on rootles docker access to encrypted drive 8 months ago:
The drive will be mounted by the host and you can use that to also decrypt it. This way Jellyfin in the docker container doesn’t know that the media is stored on an encrypted hard drive.
- Comment on Project that rates Big tech EULA's 1 year ago:
Terms of Service; Didn’t read does that, but I don‘t know if it is the one that was shared previously.