

We need to mandate interoperability and open protocols (as we did with all our other communication media prior) to avoid the siloing of users in captured commercial ecosystems.


We need to mandate interoperability and open protocols (as we did with all our other communication media prior) to avoid the siloing of users in captured commercial ecosystems.


You need to look at the DNS server used by whatever client is resolving that name. If it’s going to an external recursive resolver instead of using your own internal DNS server then you could be leaking lookups to the wider internet.
You would have to completely disable cloud saves for this which is risky.
You want to repeat the inordinate amounts of bullshit?


It’s not an orthogonal issue when it is literally the subject of the article that this comment section is about.
The author of the original post is whining that open-core business models are dead because they have no conversion pipeline. Whether or not you agree with them, you can’t claim that money-making is not a relevant topic for discussion.


Most of the scheduling decision-making code for LAVD is written in BPF, with a thin, Rust-based user-space piece.
BPF has hooks to replace the scheduler? That’s crazy, I had no idea!
Celery is the Coldplay of vegetables.


wakka wakka wakka wakka

Good for him, but I’m still never using Replit. Or any app created with it.


If you use proprietary software, this is what you sign up for.


TLDR: in the ocean


Extant since 2012 and this is the first I have heard of them. Incredible!


Does anyone else get a certificate warning when visiting this site?


These are all presumably Android apps. Is there a list for IOS apps?


It’s a reasonable stance to take given the current climate.


This article says nothing of substance and still manages to contradict itself.


Internet prices are inflated these days (especially eBay). You need to shop IRL second-hand stores, markets, garage sales etc. to get the good prices.
Does this community need a post every time there’s a new spam account?
Oh no.