

Pixels. That’s it.
Pixels. That’s it.
Well yeah, since device trees are no longer available going forward from Google, they’d be dead in the water otherwise.
Absolutely agree. My DD distro accidentally gets borked sometimes as fiddling can go too far, and it’s become essential that it doesn’t interfere with services my wife uses (file storage, movies/tv, etc). Plus, if everything was going down every so often, she’d probably start looking at me twice for the money I’ve invested in my server rack.
I have one box running TrueNas Core as a straight file server only, and another box running Proxmox for applications plus VMs for projects, as well as network gear and a surveillance NVR. Thankfully, she never sees the power bill. But, this way everything keeps humming and I don’t get an earful.
Wait and see I guess? Id imagine any compliance is going to be the onus of instance admins, so time will tell how it happens, especially depending on the instance’s geographic location. Not to mention, I’d think the fediverse is small enough to skate for a bit
The wank auditor will see you now.
Eh it’s a lot of hq BluRay rips of disks I don’t have anymore. I could reacquire and rerip, but it’d be a total pita. The rest is personal docs/photos/etc. I’ve been spitballing sticking a NAS at my mom’s, but money’s tight right now.
DVDs also go shitty after a while (many years, but still).
Looks at my 60tb media archive
There’s got to be a cheaper way.
But can you really jam it?
I have a custom domain set up on proton for my business, and I haven’t had issues either. My personal @protonmail.con address hasn’t had problems. I think this is typically an issue when setting up a local mail server, and gas something to do with security certs.
Yeah but if Verizon were to, say, collect usage data so they could figure out where to charge more to unthrottle specific apps, this type of data could be quite useful.