[H] District wallet load1k [W] 800 UPI
Same as title
I have to login to your account to load money
Same as title
I have to login to your account to load money
Same as title
Negotiable dm with offers
Want flight ticket from vtz to ixe , on may 18
Please,if possible try to make it under 5k
Need a hand picking a mini PC.
Specs I'm looking for:
16GB ram or more
1TB+ storage Decent CPU
Budget is $500 and I'm gonna use it as a daily with Ubuntu. I’ve been checking out GEEKOM A6 6800, GMKtec NucBox M7 6850U, Beelink SER6 6900HX. They seem pretty similar on paper, so I’m mostly trying to understand if there are any practical differences in things like thermals, BIOS stability, or Linux support that I should be aware of. Any other ones I should look at instead?
I'm a petite female writer, and work from my home office (which also happens to be my dream tree-view nook). For the longest time, I thought my back pain and neck stiffness were just part of the job. Turns out, I was just sitting in the wrong chair.
After dealing with hollow lower back, stiff neck, and zero support every time I leaned back, I finally decided to invest in an ergonomic chair for women – specifically the musso e80 muse.
Here's why this ergonomic chair for petite women actually works for me:
It doesn't feel like it was designed for a 6-foot man. The headrest actually reaches my neck. The lumbar follows my back. The seat depth works for my frame.
Whether I'm leaning forward to hit a deadline, slouching back when my brain is fried, or editing photos while looking down – the chair moves with me.
No more neck pain. No more hollow back. No more feeling like the chair is fighting against me.
Honestly, I hesitated because most humanized ergonomic chairs (that's what they call them) look bulky and ugly. But this one? It actually matches the aesthetic of my little tree-view nook.
If you're a petite woman who's been struggling to find a humanized ergonomic chair that fits – this one is worth a look.
Have this 175 jio data plan voucher ,
m burnt out evaluating api aggregators for our dev teams.
we hooked one up recently, and someday our models started giving random, inconsistent responses. Even worse, when an upstream provider goes down and the failover doesn't trigger smoothly, everything just stops. we checked the latency monitors, trying to figure out why the logic on our production setup was acting so unpredictable compared to the week before.
When we looked for a better solution, we noticed that some aggregators brag about having hundreds of different models, half of which are obscure things nobody is using for serious work. tbh, we just need the few we rely on to be fast and dependable. chasing variety seems to come at the expense of quality control and uptime.
we eventually went with zenmux cuz it runs pretty stable overall. They don't have a massive count of models, but the main ones we rely on like chatgpt 5.5 and opus 4.7 perform well. Even if one provider drops sometimes, it auto switches to another one so it doesn't interrupt our active projects.
Anyway, i honestly don't get why some aggregators prioritize the number of integrated models over optimizing for stability. how do you filter through these aggregators to find something reliable?
My investment to complete this is more than what I got, now I'm feeling sad 😭😢,I expected atleast 3 digit number.
Has anyone here added a motor or propulsion system to their paddleboard? I'm not looking to turn it into a speedboat or anything — just something to help me go further and still enjoy the ride. Electric fins? Underwater thrusters? DIY setups? I'm open to all ideas.
Would love to hear what's worked for you guys. Budget, ease of mounting, battery life, and portability are all things I'm considering. Thanks in advance!