No nyt on kyllä todellakin blast from the past. Liekö tullut 15 tai 20 vuoteen kuultua ja väittisin että joko tämä on remix tai sitten aika on kullannut muistoja.
Since you only need to run a single command as a user open terminal and give command 'crontab -e'. If you haven't set an editor it'll ask for one, pick nano.
The syntax for crontab is like this (man 5 crontab will show it on your system as well):
field allowed values
----- --------------
minute 0–59
hour 0–23
day of month 1–31
month 1–12 (or names, see below)
day of week 0–7 (0 or 7 is Sun, or use names)
command to run with full path
So, in your case put in this line:
0 10 * * * /usr/bin/sct 2750
I'm not sure if sct is really at that path and I don't have that installed, so verify that first (run 'which sct'). Save the file and exit editor (ctrl+o, ctrl+x on nano). That's it. However, I don't quarantee results with that, since X with environment variables and all may cause issues, but if that's the case I'm sure this community can help with that as well.
Which is a lot more difficult in every aspect than just throwing a single line on crontab and calling it a day.
It doesn't need to be a warm storage, just somewhere that snow and slush can't get and soak the wood. The cold air alone doesn't do damage, but if the furniture is wet when it goes below zero it'll cause problems. And of course when it's really cold plastic parts get brittle and specially if the furniture is used then they might get damaged.
I prefer wood and steel, but there's nuances with those as well. Some cheap "wooden" furniture is made out something more like a sponge, but in the other hand we've used some cheap dining table as a garden table, just get one made with real wood and treat it properly and it'll last quite a few years.
Very difficult to say. Expensive ones from K-rauta might still be crap and cheap set from Jysk might last a decade without issues. So it's pretty much the same than furniture in general, you need to consider look and feel vs price. Wooden ones last way longer if you treat them every now and then (oil or beeswax) and keep them stored away at winter.
Eipä kyllä ensimmäisenä tullut mieleen että siellä menisi palvelintavaraakin kaupaksi, mutta eipä tuossa korkealta putoa vaikka kokeileekin. Pitää tosin ensin käyttää vehkeitä sen verran tulilla että saa todettua toimivaksi ja vanhat datat hävitykseen.
While in this case it is the solution (and Kata1yst really seems to know what they're talking about), I feel like there's a need to remind people every now and then to be careful with shell scripts. There's loads of instructions on the internet where they suggest just to pull random script from the internet and pass it trough as is to run with root privileges. When you do something like 'curl https://stackoverflow.....|bash -' it's quite literally the same than letting a random guy from the street to your computer and let them do whatever they want with it.
Taitaa olla vähän kiinni siitä miten tekee linjanvetoa. Someriippuvuus voinee olla merkki muustakin elämänhallinnan puutteesta ja sen mukana voi tulla vähän vaikka mitä oireilua, kuten nyt tuo että ei saa aikaiseksi kokata.
Our healthcare is in serious problems due to population in general aging and birth rate decline year after a year, but even the most right wing of bigger parties don't want to shut it down completely. There's a view that commercial providers would do the same job cheaper and more efficiently, but in history that kind of movement hasn't really provided an solution. The private companies just take the easy and fast cases and leave the expensive ones for the society to deal with (caricatures again). It's not (in my opinion) a really viable solution, even if the private sector could help in some cases, like with health care provided by employees, and even then there's edge cases and gray area which needs regulation and rules.
Education and long term success of our country is a whole another matter. Currently (in my very own opinion) our education system has major problems and they need to be addressed as soon as possible, but resolving that needs some sort of soft values and cold hard cash. In a current global situation that's a difficult problem to manage and as a problem it's one of the easier ones to push into the future, regardless of the reality that it hurts much more in the long run to let the education quality to suffer.
Stripped to it's guts and simplified to the max the main problem is that we have too many old people to take care of and too few births to keep up with the demand for the workforce. It's estimated (by others, there's also different estimates) that in the next 5-10 years up to 40% of our working people will retire and there's nowhere near enough people to replace them, specially educated ones. And the people who will replace the retired are young, unexperienced and unfit for the workforce due to social media culture and whatnot.
There's no easy answers and the current parliament is built with people who give more weight for the corporations and money than labor rights and socialism (democratic variant of that, not the kind we used to have at east). As I mentioned, I personally would've preferred for us to have a bit more left leaning government, since people have suffered a lot with global issues lately and recovering from that will take both time and resources. But at the same time I understand that we can't just loan more money indefinetly and that corrections are both necessary and painful.
In the end it's just a matter of how to balance things. On a left-right axis I personally would like to see a bit more left leaning politics since I still try to believe that people will actually do their best for their society, but the parliament we chose on elections is leaning more on the right. Future will show how that goes, but I don't think we'll see anything as extreme as USA seems to have their hands in.
I personally think flatpak and snap are polluters and wasteful, but haven’t broken one of my systems in a while so I don’t mind using them.
I'm in a same boat. I have this and that installed via flatpack/snap and they mostly work, but I don't like them in a principle. And, while they strictly speaking haven't broken anything the garage computer I'm writing this with has multiple pieces of software which is installed both via apt and via snap. The one from apt is obsolete/broken, so I should go trough and clean them up, but in the other hand the snap ones (signal mostly) complains every now and then that new version has been installed and that it'll restart automatically after x days. No matter how many times I run updates the message stays until it magically disappeares.
This installation was once xubuntu 16.04 and it's been upgraded with different hardware for years and until recently it was pretty sufficient to just open console now and then and run apt update && apt dist-upgrade. After that the system would be up to date, run browser and spotify just fine (that's what I need from a garage computer, play music and offer a way to quickly search whatever online to help with projects) but now it's in a state where I can't just let it do it's thing. It requires handholding and TLC more and more often and I don't like it. Just let me upgrade a system for decades which used to be possible (and maybe still is) with Debian.
But I'm getting older by the day, I used to have Debian installations which went trough 3-4 major releases without major hiccups and it was wonderful. I like when things just work and I don't need to pay attention to the operating system itself, it's just a platform for me to do whatever I need and the less it gets in the way the better. Of course things are better now than back when we had to build our own kernels, but I suppose some of you here are younger than 2.6.0 kernel, so maybe we'll not go that far into history.
Strongly caricatured answer:
Current parliament in Finland is leaning heavily right related to previous ones. Which in American context would mean roughly that our political field is centrist, leaning slightly to the left, as your system is way more broken than ours (of course I'm looking things from this side of the pond so I might be biased about this).
The biggest party Kokoomus is traditonally aligned with corporates and free markets with less concern about worker rights and other 'soft' values. The second is Perussuomalaiset who gained support by promising to cut immigration, lower fuel prices and a lot of other mostly populist and 'cheap' anecdotes without a lot of actual means to achieve their goals.
The smaller parties included are Kristillisdemokraatit who don't seem to care much about anything else than the Bible and their interpretation of it and Swedish national party who seem to only care about rights of swedish speaking people and their language in Finland.
Some portion of the people seem to think that the current coalition will end free health care and education, destroy worker rights and unions and cripple our society which is known to take care of the poor people and those who can't take care of themselves.
The truth is most likely somewhere in between. Our political system doesn't give absolute power to anyone for multiple reasons and the leftist parties still have their ~30% of our parliament, so even if some of the more extreme changes would come to the table as is they would most likely be diluted at least somewhat before they come into reality.
I personally would have liked a different composition for our parliament after the covid and start of Ukrainian war, but I don't think it'll be a complete disaster either.
In short: No.
Assuming that I understood correctly with a quick reading that's creating a whole another network on top of existing internet and requires raw bandwidth to function at all.
Various mesh-networks have been around for quite a long time to solve the 'last mile' issue on poor areas. That requires pretty dense population to actually work, but at least couple of years ago there's been some moderately successful projects. I haven't followed those in years, so I don't know what's the current status and that's very different from what Yggdrasil is doing.