Us meatbags had our chance
It is not a stretch that such RF exposure could potentially have carcinogenic properties, but that needs context, the likelihood of a cell phone is pretty much nil.
That's not how non-ionizing radiation works. The MPE exposure limits are because you can be effectively cooked, not because you'll get cancer. You need much more energy to do that, like UV light, X or gamma rays.
Realistically, this is one of the reasons Lemmy is so good right now. The masses generally don't put up with alpha software. Honestly, I like it this way. Improvements are good, but there's something about seeing something grow and develop
Honestly that looks 10x better, and there's a decent chance I'm switching tomorrow. Thanks!
I forgot to mention that, but the Airnow integration has been pretty good. I was using Airvisual Cloud, but that doesn't seem to be as accurate.
Glad you like them! Now you gotta share whatever you build :)
I was originally using the Airvisual cloud integration, which wasn't accurate at all. I found the Airnow one right when the wildfire smoke got bad around here and it made a huge difference.
What do you want to host on this server? it's kinda hard to suggest resources without knowing that information
The best part about this imo is the new rule that permits pig latin on Casual Fridays https://www.reddit.com/r/DebateReligion/comments/14h1is9/ewnay_uleray_igpay_atinlay_ermittedpay_onway/
just FYI to anyone reading this, this stuff is indeed magic pain relief, BUT it's not an antibiotic and you still need to see a doctor. UTI's can spread and it doesn't feel very good. I would up in the ER getting IV antibiotics over Thanksgiving one year. it sucked.
They sound very unpleasant
The easiest way off the top of my head would be reinstall and manually design your partitioning so anything that'd benefit is on the SSD and everything else is on the HDD. You might be able to get away with
/
on the SSD and/home
on the HDD, I don't know what all you have installed or what amount of space Ubuntu requires by default. If you wanna go this route, I'd start your reading here: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Partitioning#Partition_scheme