Everywhere, except India, it’s about 3%.
With India the average is a bit more than 4%.
Errar es humano. Propagar errores automáticamente es #devops
Everywhere, except India, it’s about 3%.
With India the average is a bit more than 4%.
Sorry, I can’t hear you over the artillery noise.
As a spanish/romance speaking person: ahahahah LOL!
Where do you thing “gratis” and “libre” come from?
Wait.
Does Portainer ask your email? I haven’t used it in years. I though it was just a container that you run, with mounted docker socket, and that’s it.
Is it now doing some “telemetry” and sending user data, like email, to their servers? If so, I’m glad I’m not using that anymore.
Well, thank you for pointing me to this project. Didn’t know about it. I’ve just built it. So, the part of I’ll do my best to see what can I help with applies here to.
The project management may have some obvious problems (jOin dIsc0Rd sErVEr; w0rD “thEy” t0o p0liTicAl). But we really need an alternative to browsers funded by Google (Chrome and Firefox).
So I’ll do my best to actually build from sources and see what can I help with. Attacking the author is helping nobody.
And for the folks who are saying “wHy n0t rUst”, you can always show me the (rust) code.
VPS + VPN is the cheapest option I believe for the services. It doesn’t have to be “elaborated”.
You can port-forward public VPS ports to your private addresses/ports. If you don’t want to use iptables
you can use firewalld
.
The only “but” will be latency. For gaming it won’t perform as you may need.
It’s no longer open source. Big Deal in my books.
Vault features are cool. I really like it. But with Hashicorp now there is this big risk of “rug pulling” regarding its license.
The wise thing, in my opinion, is to avoid this company as much as possible.
🔒Verified secure ✅
you are a printer we are all printers
If you’re concerned about security, consider GPG signing your kernel with Libreboot GRUB for an additional layer of verification at boot.
Hey! I had no idea that was possible. I usually encrypt everything but /boot, because it’s easy that way.
I don’t have a “threat model” of someone puting malware in /boot while I’m away of the computer. But it would be nice to know how to prevent that.
Do you have a link of a guide or tutorial for that?
Hey, ChatGPT, my uncle says new Macbooks are just glorified Raspberry Pis.
How many MB/s are in a Raspberry Pi?
It’s in the archwiki 😤😤😤
Keys and tokens will be shared securely via singaporean hotels wifi.
If your comments have been federated to other instances, they will be there until they are deleted locally. If someone clicks on your user profile, they will get a DNS error if the domain is no longer there. Images in the comments pointing to you instance will be broken too. Nothing terrible actually happens.
Migrating accounts a la Mastodon is not happening soon in Lemmy.
My advice is: Go on and save some money.
I’m too lazy to label them. So, I usually keep the PDs connected to the charger and that’s it.
But if it becomes a problem I’ll probably use a wire labeler.
It would be nice if they came labeled from factory, though.
Modern problem: *exists
thAt bEcaUse le USA baD
git is already a decentralized version control software. Your local git repos are mirrors by themselves.
Put some
git fetch
in a server crontab, and you’re done. You can access them via ssh if your user have permissions.