

CEO isn’t an actual job either, it’s just the 21st century’s titre de noblesse.


CEO isn’t an actual job either, it’s just the 21st century’s titre de noblesse.


Basically a nothingburger…


Some of my favorite apps are on F-Droid and nowhere else.
These apps are for the privacy-minded people, by privacy-minded people who will absolutely refuse to be tied by name (or digital signature with an identity verification process) to their apps.
And then there’s the problem of making legally gray apps (emulators), now someone needs to be tied to that app, which makes then easier to find, or if an app starts to irritate a government or corporation, then they can find who published it pretty easily (likely without proper the proper legal oversight/subpoena) even outside of the Play Store.
What the fuck Google.


Still, most people will look at the TV during the meeting, so all you see is one side of their faces.


We tried the owls in some of our meeting rooms and we scrapped those.
What’s the point of having a 360 camera in the center of the room when everyone will stare at the big TV anyway? All the people at the other end see is everyone looking sideway to the camera.


Your best bet for quality dubbed content is to find the raw blu-ray torrent (check for the included audio tracks), and retranscode to x264, x265 or AV1 with Handbrake and the audio tracks you want to keep. No need to tinker with a/v sync from there.
You either have
or
I decided I wanted something long-term, and bought a NAS appliance I can boot my own OS onto it, so I went with the Ugreen DXP2800.
I’m running Ubuntu LTS, with Cockpit as the webUI to manage parts of it, and my web services are all running through podman containers (aka quadlets).
There’s a bit of a learning curve, which is the price I was willing to accept.
You may want to have a dead man’s switch so that the server shuts down without your intervention, or there’s the possibility that a forensic team could retrieve the encryption key in RAM through some physical attacks.
I host a couple of encrypted snapshots in the cloud (stuff that I can’t afford to lose), but it’s still vastly cheaper to host a massive amount of data locally.
The stuff I have locally is mostly stuff I can recover elsewhere (yarr), so redundancy without backup is good enough cost-wise.


Me too, but they’re all on my Plex server for all my homies to see.


Cloud computing I agree, at least until we figure out homomorphic encryption.
For cloud storage it’s not as bad, as long as you control the keys and the provider doesn’t see them then you can be fairly confident the data is safe.


But even then, they’re only liable if they distribute it themselves. Why go the extra mile of blocking the addon being sideloaded, as it’s solely done by the user?


I would have to do a one-for-one comparison, I haven’t checked that.


You can also use this filter list in uBlock Origin as an alternative
https://gitflic.ru/project/magnolia1234/bypass-paywalls-clean-filters/blob/raw?file=bpc-paywall-filter.txt


Even worse is that they try to gaslight society into thinking the poors are leeches and parasites on society, while it’s been them all along.


Aurora is my go-to nowadays


Under that rationale, you could be violating copyright law by changing the color balance on your monitor’s settings. 🥴


IPFS with MFS to ensure you can update your website after publishing and your choice of static website generator could be a way of doing it.
I’ve always been interested in Linux, and for my home server it’s been my OS for the last decade, but for the workstation I found myself dual-booting. With the advent of atomic distributions such as Fedora Kinoite, Universal Blue, Fedora CoreOS etc using the concept of OS images through
OSTree/bootc, combined with containerization through flatpak and podman is a great step forward stability and reproducibility.My desktop has been switched to Aurora (Universal Blue) for more than a year and I couldn’t be happier.