And there are still people who will downvote you for saying that Linux distros are not impregnable fortresses of OS security
And there are still people who will downvote you for saying that Linux distros are not impregnable fortresses of OS security
Your website’s theme is very pleasant to look at and also serves good for a blog since everything is easy to read. Good job, if you were the one who made it
Feeling risky today, eh? Mind sharing the reasoning behind your extravagant choice?
You need to trigger the initial fetch of your community first. You can do so by searching for it from the desired instance’s search bar as !yourcommunity@youtinstance
. After a few minutes the posts from this newly federated community should appear in the instance’s feed.
Finally, a sane answer! Sadly it’s buried all the way down here in the thread
Dude, I get their joke, but Linux ISOs are irrelevant to the conversation. That’s what I wanted to point out, because many people get confused and think I was talking about them specifically
Uhhh no, judging by the others, people definitely seem to have problem with confusing what I was talking about exactly
They were joking about whole other thing. My topic has nothing to do with distro ISOs, I was talking about packages
Whatever I’m talking about is not Linux ISOs.
Yeah, not my brightest one, that’s for sure. Still, idk about what manu distros everyone is talking about. Big distros utilise volunteer-run mirrors, from what I’ve been able to find.
Doesn’t Arch rely on mirrors to distribute packages?
uBlock Origin.
You lost me on the part where we create an in-browser screen recorder… and then proceed to package it natively.
If you are just lookin for a light screen recording utility, I suggest giving Spectacle a try.
TL;DR
A decently big casino, as you could guess from the article, was getting away with Cloudflare’s Business Plan (250$/month, which even the author in the post agrees was a “fairly low price”, likely downplaying it).
The Cloudflare team reached out to them to let them know their usage does not fit into the tier anymore and they need to pay the custom price of an Enterprise plan, which may, or may not have been fair since the author does not provide any relevant data, because they were cut off from the stats since they had their account terminated.
The casino refused and indicated they are at talks with Fastly, which was a stupid thing to tell to the CF team, because on their end it was looking like “yeah, we’re going to keep freeloading until we move to another company”, so they decided to terminate the casino’s account.
The story taught the author not to rely on proprietary services. I hope it might also teach them not to rely on any service if they are getting away with a price that is way too cheap for the resources they consume.
They, most probably, just didn’t like the name.
About the let
keyword, which is used to declare a variable.
TL;DR: The Ladybird browser, which was written from scratch and aims to be an alternative to corporate-backed browser, now has a non-profit organisation behind it. Also, it got additional funding of 1 million dollars. The end.