Best political, probably Kolkata 71. Parasite is also very good. Best apolitical, I have to go with Panther Panchali. It's so hard to just choose one movie, my answer will probably change if you ask me again in a few days. A list of 20 might do it a bit more justice lol.
I'm doing a PhD right now. I understand.
I keep some toilet paper too.
It's a type of fungus.
DEI is basically the modern n word.
I've stopped talking to Zoomers about tech completely. If I try to help, I end up confusing them more, and I don't like to simply solve shit for them because then they start bugging me for every single thing. (I'm also technically a Zoomer, but barely.)
I don't understand how can someone who is not a straight white christian male can be conservative. What are you even trying to conserve? You being oppressed?
I did a factory reset, and it seems to have fixed itself.
I have to imagine that they're high on their own farts.
I'm currently running two 4tb HDDs in a DAS attached to a Lenovo Thinkcentre tiny. It's more than enough for my usecase. (I don't run Immich, but do run PhotoPrism, which is similar in terms of resource usage.) The DAS is attached to the Thinkcentre by USB 3.0 (you can do eSATA but I'm currently happy with this setup.) The HDDs are in a mirrored VDEV which is part of a ZFS pool. It's running in on AlmaLinux with zfsonlinux.
I'll try that. Thanks.
Okay, so this was interesting to me, since Bara Dada isn't really a name. It literally means elder brother in Bengali. (Although most speakers will shorten it to Borda in everyday conversation.) I did a bit of searching, and the quote seems to come from Dwijendranath Tagore, the eldest brother of the Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore. Rabindranath did refer to Dwijendranath as Bara Dada (Boro Dada would be the better pronunciation) in his writings, and Dwijendranath was a philosopher and poet so it makes sense. The original quote seems to be, "Jesus is ideal and wonderful, but you Christians -- you are not like him." which is found in the book The Christ of the Indian Road by E. Stanley Jones.