Confirmed it is slop and u can tell from the wording that it is too, all the LLM-isms are obvious. Also there's no usecase where syncthing and chezmoi make sense. The whole point of version control is being able to keep a log of what you changed easily (something syncthing isn't designed for).
Just use a git repo and the templating function if you have secrets. If you want the entire thing to be secret then use a private repo, or self host it.
I've been using chezmoi + Syncthing for about a year now. I don't want to have to manually git commit + push + pull everytime I change a config file, so I just sync the chezmoi directory between all my devices (around 8 total). I also have a dedicated VM that I use as a central Syncthing node, and on there I have a script that pushes the chezmoi directory to my Gitea instance on an hourly basis. I then ignore the git directory in Syncthing so only the VM has the git repo and the other devices don't waste space storing/syncing it.
Maybe once every 2-3 months I will need to go back and find a previous version of a file.
> What happened is the EU (and Germany in particular) left only two development cycles to the biggest industry in Germany (and hence the biggest industry in Europe) to entirely change.
Thats of course complete BS, the change to EVs (and more economical ICEs and Hybrids in between) could be seen decades away! And VW knew it, they just chose to ignore it and continue down the easy (lazy) path.
There is nobody to blame other than VW management, the Piechs and Porsches in particular.
By using /dev/disk/by-id when adding them to the pool - and looking at the physical label on the disk itself. All disks I ever worked with had that ID printed somewhere on there.
What are you talking about? When have you last been to Europe!? Of course you can pay with debit cards all over Europe, every card terminal accepts them!
Online the same, you just use your card details like a credit card, the payment system is the same for years now anyway - thats the whole point of initiatives like this digital euro and Wero!
Direct debit is not the same as debit card. You can pay in physical stores with debit card but not with direct debit (which does not involve a card at all).
As a side note, in some countries, it is actually possible to initiate a direct debit at the POS (since cards sometimes contain enough information to recover the IBAN, mostly for historical reasons), but this has significant risks for the merchant and is usually not worth the hassle as debit card fees are very low anyway.
What number are you entering online? If it's not an IBAN but something starting with a 4 or 5, you're very likely using Visa or Mastercard, or possibly a domestic scheme. This is not the same thing at all as a direct debit, which nowadays runs on SEPA Direct Debit rails.
The Digital Euro does not exist yet, and Wero is yet another scheme (settling via SEPA instant credit transfers, I believe, but that's more of an implementation detail and doesn't change the fact that it is its own scheme with its own rules).
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