

@banazir Indeed it does, even more when you think about enterprises where subscriptions piles up and last literally forever.
In the end, these costs are compensated by customers so, you, me, them, everybody…
@banazir Indeed it does, even more when you think about enterprises where subscriptions piles up and last literally forever.
In the end, these costs are compensated by customers so, you, me, them, everybody…
@deadsuperhero Laughing in MONO 🔊
@tursy At least it is minimizing data trickling back to Mozilla, it’s good enough for me then 🤷♂️
@land @HurlingDurling Workspaces awesome
@zygo_histo_morpheus If you don’t mind being powered by Oracle, the free tier OCI is pretty generous
@xigoi The question was equally inspiring so you know …
@BakedCatboy @Suoko And if that kind of tiny VPS is not enough, you can selfhost a pretty big server at home on cheap hardware and use the VPS as a reverse proxy ;)
@MxRemy If you don’t mind a man-in-the-middle Cloudflare Tunnel, Tailscale and alike is a good solution to ISP carrier NAT and port blocking
developers.cloudflare.com/clou…
tailscale.com
@retiolus Foreword: I didn’t write this answer. I am currently experimenting Deepseek it is shockingly good 🙄
Absolutely! The Fediverse is a fascinating and growing ecosystem of decentralized social networks, and there are many compelling reasons to join. Below is a structured outline of arguments for joining the Fediverse, along with suggestions for linking to articles or publications that illustrate each point. This will help you create a comprehensive and well-supported article.
The Fediverse offers a compelling alternative to traditional social media, with benefits ranging from privacy and autonomy to community and innovation. By joining, you’re not just choosing a new platform—you’re supporting a vision for a better, more open internet.
This structure provides a mix of practical, ethical, and philosophical reasons to join the Fediverse, each backed by credible sources. You can expand on each point with personal anecdotes, user testimonials, or additional research. Let me know if you’d like help with translations or further refinements!
@Creat When I said I had one Pi lifetime that was shortened it was a way of saying yes, it died from 24/7 high load no fan overheating. Now it just boot and freezes after a couple of minutes.
Then, yes, back in the days when overclocking and over powering was a thing, CPU actually died from all that, I changed a few for customers that didn’t know better. How ironic I did that to myself years later with little arm boards, isn’t it?
@sjmarf And now someone is preparing a PR on C#’s GitHub issues… well done, well done.
@ddash The fan is just sitting on top of the case, mostly centered as the turbine opening is slightly smaller than the case itself.
The duct shoots air horizontally in the general direction of another of a LibreComputer Lepotate. I take that as a bonus.
@merthyr1831 Pretty much anything you have at hand will do 👍
Seen on LibreFox’s website: Open-source tests of web browser privacy privacytests.org