No, I don't trust them. Their idea to replace people ad with their own ad (https://archive.is/W0k4j) and their experiment with cryptocoin are two of the biggest red flags.
Just use firefox instead of brave if you wanted a privacy respecting browser
No, I don't trust them. Their idea to replace people ad with their own ad (https://archive.is/W0k4j) and their experiment with cryptocoin are two of the biggest red flags.
Just use firefox instead of brave if you wanted a privacy respecting browser
If I have never played D&D, should I get the game?
If you just wanted email forwarding, cloudflare support it. If I remember correctly, it's included in their free plan
This is why having a dedicated person/team to maintain docs is very important
Does anyone know how wiki.gg makes money? Wiki hosting side without stable income will just get bought out by bigger player or turn bad like fandom
+1 for Project Hail Mary, one of the few books that can make me forget to sleep on a weekdays to finish it
I think people only care about their privacy if the consequences is something they can see/feel directly (e.g. privacy related to election)
Air fryer
Although it's slower than deep frying, you don't need to babysit the food and can use the time to do something else. It also much easier to cleanup
My biggest fear of hosting my own important data is losing it to some hardware failure. Currently I mitigate this issue by mirroring my NAS data to onedrive (with encryption)
I always like the idea of home assistant, but I haven't figured out a practical automation for my home. Maybe you can share some of your most useful automation?
I only have a few services:
All of the service other than jellyfin is hosted on a vps. Jellyfin is hosted from my home and can be accessed remotely via wireguard. However because my isp doesn't provide a public ip, I need to use my vps as wireguard jump host
Client <-> vps <-> home server
It allows you to isolate app inside a sandbox, thus limiting the data they can harvest