Wait, did Apple implement its own codec? I thought even the Airpods Max used AAC, which is lossy.
As for Qualcomm, only aptX Lossless is lossless and I’m not aware of many products supporting it (most supports aptX HD at most)
Wait, did Apple implement its own codec? I thought even the Airpods Max used AAC, which is lossy.
As for Qualcomm, only aptX Lossless is lossless and I’m not aware of many products supporting it (most supports aptX HD at most)
Yeah, I use Caddy for that, as I only use DNS-01 for local-only services.
I have been using BunkerWeb for the past 4 years and have been mostly happy with it. Its default settings are sometimes a bit agressive but you can change those globally or service per service.
Most of the time archive.today gets the work done
It also offers a URL to get a snapshot from a given URL: http://archive.is/newest/http://lemmy.dbzer0.com/c/piracy
Yeah, the janky foundation made me and my boss wish we chose Java for the back-end multiple times. I like async / await (or coroutines in Kotlin-land), it’s easier to wrap my head around than Promises / Futures and I thought I would miss Reactive Programming, but not that much.
Yet, people willingly choose to use one of the most horrific ecosystems out there.
So far I have heard the following explanations for going full-stack JS
Ability to re-use business logic in back-end and front-end
Reduced context switching (though with frameworks that’s less true)
You don’t have to recruit developers proficient in your back-end language in addition to Javascript
Personally, having worked on a full-stack Typescript project for the past year, I kinda miss the maturity of Java’s ecosystem: there is usually one mature and well-maintained library that does its job really well ; while in Javascript-land there are multiple libraries for a single job, each with varying quality and maturity, and most of them are no longer maintained.
This is anecdotal experience, but last time I left Wireguard on for an entire day and it accounted for 5% of battery usage that day.
I believe you swapped DoT (TLS, port 853) and DoH (HTTPS) in your message. I have yet to be in a network that restricts port 853, but if I could I would rather use DoH on Android.
Unfortunately you can’t follow users on Lemmy. On Kbin, Mastodon and others, you can follow Bluesky users through Bridgy Fed but they must opt-in first by following @ap.brid.gy (which very few people do)
Okay, that makes much more sense.
Wait, is it required to mirror the entire Bluesky history? Can’t you just store only new messages? Because the storage requirements (4.5TB according to the article) make it almost impossible to self-host.
TIL that Schneider Electric is a French company. I always assumed it was American or Swiss.
I have been contemplating moving to SearNXG for a few weeks, but I have a hard time finding whether I can configure things like domain down-ranking/blocking or custom bangs and lenses, does anyone know if you can do that on a user or instance-level?
I still don’t get why Strava activities are public by default and why they do not make their users aware of it. I remember having to rummage through the settings to make activities private by default.
If you want an experience similar to Arc without the AI nonsense, there is Zen Browser, a Firefox fork with vertical tabs, profiles and side panel.
Parents, maybe? They are usually so concerned about children’s safety, whether that’s their kids or someone else’s.
It will end up being analogous to Uber and Lyft, and neither helps reducing the amount of cars on the road.
Also it doesn’t respect robots.txt
(the file that tells bots whether or not a given page can be accessed) unlike most AI scrapping bots.
In addition to the BIOS settings, I had to create a systemd service that prevents Linux from disabling Wake-on-LAN on shutdown.