It doesn’t look deleted to me.
How would one go about reading the logs on how federation worked in this case? I’m thinking lemmy.ml either missed it did not honor the delete from lemmy.zip
It doesn’t look deleted to me.
How would one go about reading the logs on how federation worked in this case? I’m thinking lemmy.ml either missed it did not honor the delete from lemmy.zip
I’ve enjoyed using proton for my own domain. Adding another 2-3 domains and a second user raises the cost to the point that I just can’t justify. ~$200 up front for two years.
Does your internets take a little break while these call?
I wonder if you can just call-forward to your ex… 🤔
I hope to see some mid-range phones that fit in a normal hand. In the 4-5" range.
You know what they say about guys with big hands, right?
They have big gloves.
That brings a whole new meaning to impostor syndrome.
I don’t think I’d want to use a platform the government is so intent on getting a backdoor access to.
That’s every platform. Telegram is just too big to push back as hard as it has.
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I had Android running on my OG iPhone. Must’ve been around Android 2.1 or so.
It was not really usable. More of a curiosity.
There’s an embedded video above the headline. It’s easy to dismiss as an ad. I did, too.
Thanks for the tip!
This was a long-standing showstopper for me & Wayland. I got rid of my work computer instead, but if I get another one I’ll be sure to test this out.
Google also has an app called just Gallery which doesn’t pull this crap.
and not lose files
Which is exactly why you’d want to run a CoW filesystem with redundancy.
I switched in 1997.
The internet was taking off, and it was built on Linux and un*ces. It was just a lot more fun.
Also, C-programming. M$ had just gotten protected memory in NT4.0, but a lot of applications just didn’t run on NT. It’d take another three years before protected memory hit mainstream with win2k. No novice programmer wants their computer to bluescreen every time they do a tiny little out of bounds error.
I worked at a niche factory some 20 years ago. We had a tape robot with 8 tapes at some 200GB each. It’d do a full backup of everyone’s home directories and mailboxes every week, and incremental backups nightly.
We’d keep the weekly backups on-site in a safe. Once a month I’d do a run to another plant one town over with a full backup.
I guess at most we’d need five tapes. If they still use it, and with modern tapes, it should scale nicely. Today’s LTO-tapes are 18TB. Driving five tapes half an hour would give a nice bandwidth of 50GB/s. The bottleneck would be the write speed to tape at 400MB/s.
Sounds like it’s localStorage. But I’d expect that to be covered by “site data” in that option.
It’s a bit like cookies, but just for one site. Some think they can avoid cookie consent banners with localStorage.
Firefox has a page on the topic.
I haven’t heard of it before, but if Google bans it they must be doing something right.
I’ll check it out.
I’m sure it’s great and all, but the hassle of having a filesystem that’s not in the kernel is a no-starter for me. Maybe one of those fancy NAS-distros that are based on some *BSD.
Well, snapshots, too. I just consider them to be a special case of de-duplication.
I had an issue when I ran out of space during conversion between RAID profiles a few years back. I didn’t lose any data, but I couldn’t get the array to mount (and stay) read-write.
That’s funny. I switched from Slackware to Gentoo in 2003 because it was simpler.