

If you have a chance to read the article, I’d highly recommend it. It directly addresses that point.
If you have a chance to read the article, I’d highly recommend it. It directly addresses that point.
The article says you should stick with Firefox. If you have time, I’d recommend reading the entire article!
Did you read the article? It says Firefox is the best choice you have, and all of the criticism is directed at the organization’s leadership.
That’s only true for the high-end Pi 5. Lower-powered models like the zero 2 are still cheap, and they’re a lot easier to find than a few years ago.
They aren’t very useful for much besides hobby projects. Modern hardware is more energy efficient and will be cheaper in the long run compared to anything that would be considered e-waste. The only advantage an old laptop has is the initial cost, so it makes sense for a small home server.
(6) Try buying a toilet that uses more than 1.6 gallons per flush in the US. Oh wait, you can’t, it’s banned.
Not the best example since they’re trying to reverse all of these environmental protections.
According to the article, they were under investigation for over 5 years. I wonder if they would be less willing to open new investigations given recent events.
Nothing to worry about unless you’ve signed a contract with someone. Normally when you sign with a record label you’re selling them the rights to your music, so they could sue you if you try to give it away or sell it without them being involved. Record labels are known to be pretty predatory…
If they send 2 emails per subdomain per year, that could easily be 10s of millions which would make the cost per email measured in thousandths of a cent. And I could see the number of subdomains being larger by a factor of 10, maybe more.
Another angle: someone with IT experience needs to manage the system that seems emails, and other engineers need to integrate other systems with the email reminder system. The time spent on engineering could easily add up to thousands per year, if not tens of thousands.
I’m guessing their figure is based on both running costs and engineering costs.
This doesn’t answer OP’s question, but since other people might be interested, MIT also has free graduate level courses. If you choose to pay for a certificate of completion for the courses then they can also count as credits towards a degree at MIT, Harvard, etc.
If you have a spare pci-e port you can get a card that adds a USB controller. Some m.2 ports also have a pci-e channel you could use with an adapter.
LetsEncrypt is a good option if you want to set it up yourself. More work than cloudflare though.
And you lose access to “your” site if they go out of business. Sounds a lot like renting, not sure where the “ownership” part comes in.
The vulnerability was discovered during a pwn2own competition. The competition was endorsed and probably sponsored by Synology. Not sure what the problem is?
OP: asks for advice about IRC
just_another_person: only stupid and lazy people use IRC
…
just_another_person: why doesn’t anyone appreciate how helpful I am?
Wasn’t it founded by the original founder of Twitter, not ex-employees? Not that it makes much difference…
Quoting my previous comment:
Why move an entire community to matrix if IRC works fine?
In other words, why “fix” it (and risk fragmenting the community) if it ain’t broke?
If you still don’t understand why people use IRC then we clearly didn’t make the same point, and you misunderstood mine.
People still use it for the same reason we use email… Why move an entire community to matrix if IRC works fine? Anyone who wants to use matrix can set up a bridge, anyway. And I wouldn’t consider discord a good alternative.
The difference between this and the iPhone 4 leak might just be company policy. I’m sure Apple’s rules for handling prototypes got stricter after the first leak, so this guy probably broke more rules than the first, even if they did basically the same thing.