

The one on the picture is actually a Keyone. It runs Android 8 which was just fine.
Also on Mastodon: @pedroapero@mastodon.top
Want to send me a tip? XMR:89oiUKyACFZ655sTikh42RF8wpd46EQDmbTQUQiHHRWFEatjp5xxj4tZBhMMfjC4X45qvq4EdEGXkBsdxT1kP9xyVia8mPD
The one on the picture is actually a Keyone. It runs Android 8 which was just fine.
Hi, I’m in France but sorry my comment was for Google Maps, not Apple maps, my bad!
I’m in Europe, here it displays «Gulf of Mexico (Gulf of America)»
I primarily buy used drives. Depending on your area, you might find buyers easily for your old 4TB+ ones.
Also the “auto normalize” option (true by default and only shown in advanced settings) can mess-up with your source files. Mouting source files read-only won’t work either as it is creating files in source folders.
manual and builds are here: https://zadzmo.org/code/nepenthes/
indeed, I have this daily archive backed-up via syncthing like any other data.
I use RSS but as far as I’m concerned, Lemmy is better, because it is categorized and ranked.
All CEOs understood how to behave with such an arrogant person: flatter him and he will bow to your every wims.
One-day-late duplicate of: https://lemmy.ml/post/24759404
These IPFS issues are basically UI-related. You wouldn’t expect a torrent to start within 2 seconds. You wouldn’t expect your torrent to be shared autonomously either. Technically, sharing IPFS hashes along with release names (similar to the crc32 on pre databases) would be very efficient, if only it was popular with a proper UI and indexing tooling. These hashes could even be signed by scene groups in the nfo.
It is not anonymous and suffers network fragmentation. Yet the force of Bittorrent is its large community and mature performant tooling (compared to IPFS).
I’d say yes. The user base / visibility of i2p torrent is pretty limited though. You can have a look at the Postman i2p tracker.
Sounds overkill just for backing up files.
Agree on Wireguard. It is faster, more stable and most likely more secured than SSH. And it will work with any application (no per-application configuration required). Without a third party tunneling service, you will need to expose a port in any case (you can setup port-knocking if you want to).
Don’t know who exactly you are interested in, here are some random known accounts:
Regarding individuals, I’m following a bunch of software developpers. I’m mostly interested in topics, hence I prefer Lemmy by far.
DHT is autonomous and does not require a tracker. Usually it is only used as a fallback as a regular tracker is quicker. It’s p2p, and is split accross people hosting it.
A phone server that is disconnected from cellular is already broken anyways.
Palworld is another kind of game playable multiplayer on xbox/pc.
I’m very satisfied with mine. Some UI tweeks were required to adapt to the small screen.