if it’s to cheap, the market wont be able to profit enough, so I’m pretty sure they will find a way to squeeze us dry anyway
if it’s to cheap, the market wont be able to profit enough, so I’m pretty sure they will find a way to squeeze us dry anyway
Oh cool, thanks for providing the source
Everything that’s normal between age 10-20 is just as it is.
Everything you get to know between 20 and 30 is the hot new shit.
Everything after age 30 is just another fad you don’t want to invest time to get to know anyway
I never used an iPhone. Got one from work but put it in a drawer and kept using my Android.
Magsafe? What does it change? A short google sounds like it’s NFC with magnets. What’s so special about it?
I’m using a pixel 5 with grapheneOS. Battery lasts for two days easy and is 80% recharged in 90mins. I have a night stand that wireless charges the phone every night. What I’m trying to say is, battery is a non problem for me
“I’ll never leave Apple but the iPhone 11-15 are all the same exact phones,” said one user in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
I’m getting serious
vibes here
I wouldn’t be so sure about it. There is a famous quote from Thomas Watson:
“I think there is a world market for maybe five computers”
AI is overhyped but has so many applications, it won’t go away any time soon.
As far as I know sending and receiving SMS through KDE connect, I’m using the gnome implementation Gsconnect, should work flawlessly. Not the prettiest experience but it works. GSconnect comes with a message viewer that even let’s you browse old SMS
My thoughts exactly 😂😬😋😭
After using Firefox for 20 years, aside of maybe 3 times I never had any problems. So I can’t confirm the second point at all
It’s more like quick and dirty. I generally try to create a volume and save the data outside the compose folder. Default is /var/lib/docker/volumes if I remember correctly.
Just to correct a mistake: - ./vaultwarden:/data/ means that the folder /data/ of the container is in the subfolder vaultwarden inside the folder that contains the docker-compose.yml. it is not located in /. for that you need to remove the leading “.”
If you remove ./ vaultwarden points to a volume named vaultwarden that need to be defined separately:
./vaultwarden = relativ path from the docker-compose folder
/vaultwarden = absolut path /
vaultwarden = a volume called vaultwarden
TBH, you need additional backups anyway and you don’t need 100% uptime. You don’t need to pay much for it for internal redundancy (aside of storage) and server features.
Buy the nuc, buy one or two 10GB HDD with usb/usb-c and an external case and your are good to go.
But in the end, any PC will work. Get a cheapo PC, buy 1 SSD for the os and container and a big external disk for storage.
I’m running a Ryzen 5 5600G with 32GB Ram, B450 Chipsets, 1TB SSD for internal and 2 4tb SSD for storage in a micro atx. Cost me around 1200€ bucks 2 years ago.
You can even use an old laptop with a broken panel if you like.
Another possibility is, to buy a cheap (old) server from some company renewing it’s support contracts (loud, space, power hungry).
Or buy an fanless industrial pc. Anything is possible. You could even try to use arm.
I’d recommend to optimize for power consumption, noise (depending where it is located in your home) and storage. Not ECC or redundancy. as long as you do regular backups to another system, which you should do in any case, there is no reason to pay double for something.
First thing I bought after my system was running, was an additional nic, to be able to use the server as a firewall, not an UPS or another hot standby PSU
Your own nextcloud instance. Then move everything that is saved at Google over to your own server.
Calenders, Filesync, Contacts sync with android works really nice.
Knowing my data is stored only on my own devices and google doesn’t know more about me than I do is a nice feeling.
sounds like a really bad idea. there is a reason everyone needs to leave the office when a fire alarm happens.