Will talk about Linux, plants, space, retro games, and anything else I find interesting.
Nice, you get a sticker!
I think rust would also bring in more developers. So more changes would eventually make its way into the kernel.
Admins have the ability to add upper limits to user uploads. I set mine to 100gb but it’s a family instance.
If you have the rights or it’s cc then that’s fine.
If you don’t make sure you have permission from the creators or rights holders.
Feel free to post to: !peertube@lemmy.world if/when you do!
I think an expiration date of one year without a post of any sort should let the admins get new mods for a community. It’s such a ridiculous amount of time that I think it’s reasonable.
Theres quite a few on !peertube@lemmy.world. Check it out
GitHub
GitHub can selfhost, but only on enterprise. Quite a few large companies have their own just to limit what code can get out.
sdf users seem to pop up with lots of self made content. Which is really awesome.
Not really. Most users on most platforms are just users. I give kudos to those instances that have unique names and < 10 users. Or to sdf, those users are awesome.
Im not the creator of the video ( thelinuxexperiment@tilvids.com ) but I probably wronged it at some point.
All of my suggestions are for the phone? I don’t understand the confusion.
Its best not to use a phone at all if you can help it.
The keyboard app on most phones that are default still gives info to apple/google. So even if you use signal, the data goes over.
You can side-load apps that take phone keyboards over (even better if you don’t use base android OS at all). But I dont know your situation.
I know your joking but the most secure that is still usable is probably an encrypted home server and using something like irc/XMPP. A pi with yunohost can do wonders. You can use the converse app on the phone to hook into that. It’s auto encrypted if you go that route.
Security is a spectrum so you have to chose how much inconvenience is best for your situation.
No problem. You did all the hard work! And it was a great video. I learned a bit :)
From: https://www.baen.com/faq
Founded by Jim Baen, Baen Books has been bringing readers pulse-pounding, thought-provoking adventures straight from the heart of science fiction and fantasy for decades. We publish books in hardcover, paperback, and electronic form, and are one of the few traditional publishers that maintains its own ebooks webstore (with at least four new titles added every month). We are also perhaps the only book publisher to make our electronic advanced readers copies (eARCs) available for sale to devoted fans before a book’s official release date. In addition, we also sell ebooks from other publishers. We sell more than 2000 books from over 500 authors published by 24 different companies. Good reading to all!
One of the first and longer lasting ebook publishers for a LONG time. You get DRM free books at reasonable prices.
In many ways, open source started because of printers https://medium.com/curious-burrows/the-story-of-open-source-so-far-bfcb685d85a4
complaining (and doing something) is what started the whole thing.
Old Casio watch. Works well on the same battery.
I have an old iPod I use when I go for walks or work.
Ive used this in the past to host an email server. Eventually, my ISP actually stopped allowing people to use mail ports, so I had to discontinue. But it worked very well when I used it many years ago.
https://github.com/nodrm/DeDRM_tools is just the first one that pops up. Theres a LOT of software out there that does this. I would recommend getting a copy as GitHub has been going after “grey” repos for a bit once they are discovered (see switch emulation and the many fan games).
Most of the time, I personally just avoid by going to publishers that dont lock down books. They make things much easier than Amazon.
Yep couple people.