emuspawn

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I've passed through my GPU for acceleration purposes which has worked pretty well. I don't see a passed-through GPU in your screenshot. I'll assume you turned on the correct IOMMU and SR-IOV settings, added the PCI:E hardware to that VM, and made sure it showed up inside the guest OS?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Universe would die before monkey with keyboard writes Shakespeare, study finds

Maybe the monkey can be a little less of a dick, for science?!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 days ago

"I mean, it's one plant label, Michael. How much could it cost, $100?"

[–] [email protected] 6 points 4 days ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago

That's a pretty good question. I 💯 agree that it can fall into authoritarian colonial bullshit, and in fact that's probably what I was thinking of in terms of 'defining' vs 'advancing'. I'll invoke the case of the 'Sad Puppies', a bunch of lame ass white men who were super mad that the Hugos were overwhelmingly going to 'not white men' (read: interesting BIPOC voices everyone loves and gasp......women?!).

I would probably claim the Sad Puppies tried to define culture.

The rest of the attendees advanced it by telling them to fuck right off.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago

I'm based in the Pacific Northwest, so here's a few of my favorites in the region.

Seattle

Swanson's is the normal recommendation, they are pretty cool. If maybe a little pricey.

RIP City People's.....

Tacoma

Calendula Farm & Earthworks is worth a visit! They have a good selection of native plants.

Portland Ave Nursery. This is in Tacoma! I've bought a few trees from them! It's definitely got a good vibe.

Portland

One Green World is my current mail order choice for bare roots. They are in Portland, OR. I've visited the retail location down there, it's a good way to spend some time!

Snohomish

Flower World is also very neat and very dangerous (for my wallet).

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago

Garden cleanup continues! I'm doing the boring bits of tidying/repairing my cheapo greenhouse from last year. I'll be putting some more onions in the ground just to have greens.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 5 days ago

Pumpkins Georg, who lives in spooky bog & disposes of over 15 million pumpkins every day, is an outlier and should not have been counted.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago (2 children)

Is defining culture the same as advancing culture?

[–] [email protected] 11 points 6 days ago (3 children)

It sucks, but as someone who hosts their own services and supports business clients: If they have a budget, Office365 all the way. Does it suck paying money to M$? Oh hell yeah. But it's a 'cost of doing business'. Don't screw around if they can afford it, just go O365 :(

[–] [email protected] 9 points 6 days ago

kale is a delicious vegetable

(˶ᵔ ᵕ ᵔ˶)

KALE DOESN'T EXIST IT'S CABBAGE ALL THE WAY DOWN

( •̀ - •́ )

^AND^ ^NEITHER^ ^DO^ ^VEGETABLES^

(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

So cute! What's your favorite yarn you've worked with so far?

29
What's growing on, Beehaw? (orbiting.observer)
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Howdy, gardeners! It's been a minute since I posted, but my PNW garden is just getting up to steam!

My first cukes came in, I'm growing 'Spacemaster 80' slicing cucumbers and 'Homemade Pickle' cucumbers, for obvious reasons. Cukes I've just made my first batch of pickles using a Claussen knock off recipe from the forbidden site, so we'll see how that goes. It just went in the fridge for cooling, so I get to try it in just a couple days!

I've started researching canning, as I want to can peppers, tomatoes, beans, and maybe corn - should the Corn Experiment prove bountiful. Learning how to Not Get Botulism seems pretty important!

My tomatoes are doing well - I'm growing Roma, Gardener's Delight, and Oxheart. I'm endlessly fascinated by how the Roma tomatoes look like they do on the label of the can :) Those are in containers. The other two varieties are trellised and are going nuts!

Gardener's Delight: Tomatoes

Oxheart: Tomatoes

Gardener's Delight Closeup: Tomatoes

Oxheart Closeup: Tomatoes

All the peppers are finally flowering. I'm growing Serrano, Jalapeno, Poblano, Shishito, and Ground Cherries. They are all growing rather well except a couple of the Shishito's in the raised bed seem quite small.

In my Three Sisters Garden, corn is growing fairly well, it seems half of them are 'normal' size and the other half are still half height, so I may have packed it too tight. I'm growing Blue FM1 pole beans, which have just flowered and are doing well, as well as pumpkins, of which two have grown so far, still green.

Corn Boys

In the Squash Garden, I've got crazy vines from my Kubota squash, with 4 or so gourds growing. I planted beans here but they never really took off.

Squash Garden

I also built a 'Wildlife Garden' this year. It's open to the public (animal visitors) and I don't do any pest control here. It's also gone NUTS! I have Blue Hubbard squash growing a mile a minute with 8 gourds on the vine, scarlet runner beans reaching for the sky, some ridiculous sunflowers pushing their way up, chamomile, clover, feverfew, boy it's wild! It's fun to look at.

Wildlife Garden

For salad greens we've had the 'Tower of Power' going for a few months - it was a strawberry planter that I stuck a bunch of transplanted lettuce/chard/kale/mustard plants into. It produced salad for us every couple days, pretty excellent! My wife asked me to start migrating it back to strawberries, so I've started that process. Due to that, I've replanted a bunch more greens to keep us going!

THE TOWER PROVIDES Jumpstarting Strawberries Jumpstarting Strawberries

And speaking of those strawberries, I'm propagating a bunch of strawberry plants (june-bearing) to have more ground cover for next year in addition to the strawberry tower, and I'm hoping my ever-bearing strawberry will put out runners, but it's still fruiting consistently!

I got a small onion harvest (time to figure out how many onions I'd actually need in a year), and plenty of garlic. This was my first year growing onions, and half the garlic was from last years harvest!

I also have numerous other things going - my lemongrass is growing really well:

As is my celery in a pot:

I've been growing marigolds and nasturtiums all over the place. The nasturtiums are great in salad! My cabbage started doing pretty well once I defeated an Aphid Menace that was stunting them.

So, that's my big ole report! What’s growing on with you all?

(Apologies to [email protected] if I stepped on your toes, I felt compelled to make a weekly thread!)

41
New greenhouse! (orbiting.observer)
 

Spring is approaching! I've just set up a level 1 greenhouse (plastic tier, I'll have to grind to upgrade to glass and metal....). Regardless, it's exciting! My seedlings are doing well, I can't wait for better weather!

What are you going to grow this year, Beehaw?

36
Get low! (orbiting.observer)
 

cross-posted from: https://orbiting.observer/post/37238

To the Window! To the Wall!

 

This is a beautiful Lemon Queen sunflower in my backyard. I've planted a whole row, but this one shot up and got an early start, the rest barely have their heads grown.

I'm growing these as part of The Great Sunflower Project, a citizen science effort to track pollinators in the United States. These were chosen for their wide appeal to pollinators, and true to form, there is always at least one sort of insect buddy visiting at any given moment!

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