A median is an average and is exactly that.
Intelligence also tends to be a bell curve distribution which means the mean is likely that way too. Also means the mode, the final type of average, is also likely in the middle.
A median is an average and is exactly that.
Intelligence also tends to be a bell curve distribution which means the mean is likely that way too. Also means the mode, the final type of average, is also likely in the middle.
I don’t think it’s the height of the table, it’s that it needs to roll under the bed.
I actually learned GDScript this summer. When the Unity debacle happened, Zenva.com was running a Godot humble bundle. While the bundle doesn’t exist, you can find similar courses on Youtube. The courses were just creating simple games, like ‘Create a 2D Platformer with Godot 4’ or ‘Real-Time Strategy Game with Godot 4’. I did about half a dozen of those. That gave me the tools to understand the basic usage of GDScript as well as the Godot engine. Anything more advanced was googling my question. There’s A LOT of GDScript developers, and with it being open source the community tends to be very helpful, ime.
You can do the basic records via file. /etc/pihole/custom.list is a hosts formatted file for records so you don’t have to use a gui.
I had dns issues until I got my allowed ips squared away. You could try setting it to 0.0.0.0/0 if it’s not already to verify it’s not the problem.
The lines before it seem to imply you’ve run it before. If this is a new install I’d try dropping the scheme entirely and starting again.
I use this guy https://github.com/haugene/docker-transmission-openvpn
Open up the transmission rpc port and you’re golden. It also sets up a proxy for any other services/devices you want to run through the VPN. Supports port forwarding for PIA too.
Even if your router can issue two DNS servers you shouldn’t add a second that’s not a pihole.
Otherwise a client will just fail over any blocked lookups to the secondary, negating the purpose of a pihole.
Dippin’ dots are still made that way.
If you want to host it locally, Stirling PDF can be run in docker, and uses a library that uses Tesseract. Has a bunch of other handy PDF operations, too. I keep it around for the two times a year I need to merge, split, or decrypt PDFs.
https://github.com/Frooodle/Stirling-PDF/blob/main/HowToUseOCR.md
It can do it straight from PDF and do multiple files at a time.