If you’re talking about CrowdStrike, I’d call it part of the malware infrastructure.
From the perspective of the OP’s point though, it is a good argument since it capitalises on the panic described.
If you’re talking about CrowdStrike, I’d call it part of the malware infrastructure.
From the perspective of the OP’s point though, it is a good argument since it capitalises on the panic described.
They could be, but 2M new Brazilian users after Twitter’s block there actually seems quite low and definitely credible.
On iOS I’ve been using Vinegar - Tube Cleaner
by developer And a Dinosaur. It doesn’t replace YouTube as a whole - only the video player. Better interface, no ads.
Ah NFS… It’s so good when it works! When it doesn’t though, figuring out why is like trying to navigate someone else’s house in pitch dark.
FUD wars on Free and Open Source Software, shady deals with companies and governments to make them dependent on MS software and solutions, holding the web hostage to IE “standards”, …
That makes zero sense. Where did you get that idea from?
For reference, here are their docs describing key management. https://tailscale.com/blog/tailscale-key-management
I found Tailscale to be easier to install and configure than ZeroTier, and also to have better performance.
I have never used Twingate.
Could you provide a source for this claim? Not doubting you but I haven’t seen it.
That’s great! I’ll give it a go again soon.
Whilst this is fair criticism, I was responding to complaints about the UX in other CADs.
Yeah I’ve been meaning to try FreeCAD in anger but every time I try it out I find it clumsy, awkward and limited. I’m hoping the new organisation will allow them to get more funding, I’d really love an actually good open source CAD.
Thanks for the detailed report! 💪
That’s on the free license. Fusion360, to which this thread is offering an alternative, has the same limitation.
I found Onshape to be quite nice. It was relatively easy to translate skills from Fusion to it after a few YouTube videos.
Hey! Sorry you had these bad experiences.
My setup is on Debian testing
and is documented on this blog post: https://blog.c10l.cc/09122023-debian-gaming
I don’t have an Nvidia card but other than that, this should give you a head start, including virtual surround on headphones if that’s your thing!
I promise it’s not a lot of work and I tried to make it all easy to follow (feedback welcome though!).
If you decide to give it a go, let me know how it went!
I’ve been using glauth + Authelia for a couple years with no issues and almost zero maintenance.
Yes, absolutely. Ideally there would be an automated check that runs periodically and alerts if things don’t work as expected.
Monitoring if the backup task succeeded is important but that’s tue easy part of ensuring it works.
A backup is only working if it can be restored. If you don’t test that you can restore it in case of disaster, you don’t really know if it’s working.
I guess it depends on where you are. Where I am the air is a lot less humid than in other places, and I have the opposite effect. I put the filament roll in the dryer and start printing. As time passes, like the filament gets dryer and stringing reduces.
The public keys can be stored anywhere, it doesn’t matter. That’s why they’re called public: because they’re not private, they’re not sensitive, they’re not a secret.