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i know it’s not the point of the post, but people that use “which” incorrectly like this really grinds my gears
in which, to which, etc. it isn’t that hard
i know it’s not the point of the post, but people that use “which” incorrectly like this really grinds my gears
in which, to which, etc. it isn’t that hard
have you checked in the invidious logs for error messages? without your configs or logs, all we can do is guess about likely issues
I’ve got a lepotato; let me see if i can get some benchmarks for you
you know this is the selfhosted community, right?
i thought this was about the MUD server software, and got excited. alas.
i laughed at the meme, and didn’t know who the dude was. so maybe it’s not as big a problem as you think? shrug
libertarians believe wholeheartedly in freedom of association and the right to voluntary exchange. As soon as you start talking forced anything, you’ve lost us.
I’m reading and agreeing, really vibing with what you’re saying. Then you have to go and fumble it on the last line. Come on, man! Every soda afficianado knows Dr Thunder is the poor man’s Dr Pepper
well I’ll give that a shot. thanks!
if you are using sonarr and radarr and don’t know about bazarr, check it out. it’s a companion app for searching and downloading subtitles for your media
i like jellyfin, but I’ve found that the roku jellyfin app throws an error trying to play some of my media. So I’m still using Plex for now
i get what he’s trying to say, it’s just phrased poorly and misusing “to which”. it seems like someone trying, and failing, to sound smart.
one way to see if you should use “which”, “to which” or “for which” is to put the preposition at the end and see if that sounds like something an actual human speaker of the language would say (yes, it’s technically grammatically incorrect to put a preposition at the end of a sentence, but whatever)
i.e.
rephrasing it