My issue has been the right earbud getting capped at ~10% volume - left is fine, right is almost inaudible. Luckily didn’t have the battery issues others had with 2.0.0
Yes, an app designed to receive user generated content will allow users to upload arbitrary content. This is not really an issue unique to Lemmy, and can be fixed by banning abusive users
Not money as such, but being able to talk about printing made it easier to hang out with one of the production engineering teams at work - their Friday drinks are pretty fun, and the manager has a pretty liberal understanding of what “business expense” means
Kubernetes is awesome for self hosting, but tbh is superpower isn’t multi-node/scalability/clustering shenanigans, it’s that because every bit of configuration is just an object in the API, you can really easily version control everything - charts and config in git, tools like Helm make applying changes super easy, use Renovate to do automatic updates, use your CI tool of choice to deploy on commit, leverage your hobby into a DevOps role, profit
Exactly this - none of those vendors will sell to me, but I can get a ThinkPad shipped from any of the major local retailers, or direct from Lenovo themselves. I’d love a Framework, and I’m trying to set it up so I can get one shipped to a friend in the UK who will be visiting next year but I’m sceptical that the timing will work out or that Framework will accept my credit card
x/y problem - what are you actually trying to achieve? Do you need help with will power and stopping yourself installing certain apps? Does you kid keep installing TikTok on your work phone? Are you worried about state mandated surveillance software?
Nice write up - I’m also with Gandi, run my own DNS, and switched to Migadu when the email pricing changes came in. Will take a look an INWX next time domains come up for renewal
The short answer is no, you aren’t bound to the nation’s laws unless you have a “presence” in their jurisdiction - it could be argued that by using CloudFlare you might be subject to US law because the traffic runs through systems owned by a US company, or you are giving money to a US company by using them as a registrar. The worst they could probably do is order CloudFlare to turnover records or stop doing business with you, but still. Typically that would require lawyers and be expensive, so unless you’ve really pissed off someone with a ton of cash you are probably safe.
The actual domain itself doesn’t really bind you beyond the registration rules, which the country themselves set - typically these will allow for cancellation of the registration for any reason.