

–iconv shows option not supported


–iconv shows option not supported


that looks like something I tried earlier that partially worked. It seems like for that method I need the iocharset declared at mount time and then to use rsync with the correct iconv flags


nope, that didnt help. theres HFS stuff this system doesnt like so it can see things but not interact with them


iocharset= what though?


I have been plying with hcopy but its giving me backtalk over syntax. It’s whining about what it find s being directories. Yea, that why I passed -r to copy recursively. it just responds by saying thats a directory and not copying anything.
I cant figure out what iocharset is wants for normal mount options so it can copy some things that way but not others.
Also, again, this is HFS, not HFS+.


oh no, sorry, we have external CDroms. its the file names themselves. not the data within.


Then what would read that flash drive? That doesn’t solve the problem.


HFS, not HFS+. The characters are not being substituted. KDE throws errors and dies. rsync and cp fail to move all files, giving a list of things they skipped.
The volume slider with a scroll wheel over the taskbar icons is such a clever little addition. It makes so much sense. I can’t believe nobody else thought of this.


Help me understand what this does. It looks like it run on your own device and fetches YouTube videos you want to see, presenting them to you through its interface without ads and shit.
So I could throw it in my server and have my phone pull up its page and play content right?


Stacher already dines the one off things like that for me. I’m more looking at automated runs.


I was looking at a pixel running graphene this last upgrade cycle but google taking a swing a third party roms chased me back to apple for now.


I’m not really looking to do this with apps since google is pretty close to the regime so anything good could be taken down at any time. I want something to copies it down and I pull in with my existing stack like Pinchflat did, but cleaner.
Part of this is I’m still on apple. I’m looking at fleeing, but certainly not to google. Until I finally get off my ass and get a Linux phone, let’s just assume this has to work from a webUI


As much as I like the idea of this, I don’t really have any way to vet this. That’s not where my skills lie. And I live in a country run by fucking morons that want Russia to win this thing anyway so no traffic coming from my country should be considered trusted any more than this.
While willful participation in a DDOS attack is a literal crime where I live, the greater concern I have is not being able to confirm this does what it says it does and nothing else. We are well beyond the Low Orbit Ion Cannon days.


you are Apple-centric:homebridge
There’s a mix: homebridge
You are out of mood stabilizers: arduino and an ESP32


The behavior I described spans multiple Oracle products, not just virtual box. There are plenty of other sins they’d committed too.


Oracle is a shady company. They do this cute little trick where they give out free software, but if it ever appears in a corporate environment and phones home, that’s no longer free and they shake down the company the person they tricked works at. So Sharon in department X brings her laptop from home and hops on the company wifi and virtualbox phones home, now her employer is being sued. They do lot of other shit too but a general rule in the IT world is to stay the fuck away from oracle whenever possible.


Still Oracle, still not going to touch it.
I spun up an old Mac running tiger and all but one cd was read fine.