

Wouldn’t it make more sense to focus on an open standard like RISC-V instead of ARM?
Wouldn’t it make more sense to focus on an open standard like RISC-V instead of ARM?
Would you mind providing some reasoning so this doesn’t come off as unsubstantiated badmouthing?
Does this explanation by ChatGPT make sense to you?
This comment seems to express a strongly negative opinion about Google. The writer is suggesting that Google’s services should not be included in any positive or useful lists. Instead, they believe that Google and its services should be on a “list of things to avoid,” implying that using Google is something people should avoid for some reason – likely due to concerns about privacy, data collection, or general distrust of the company.
The only list any of their services should be included in is the list of things to avoid.
Perfectly readable with the Voyager App.
I stopped using it since they keep not updating the electron version they are using. It took them forever to update after electron 28 went EOL and they updated to a version that would go EOL about a week later, which they have been on ever since…
Edit: They just bumped to a supported version, but only in master. It’s still unknown when a release with a supported electron version is coming.
I really like Wormhole for this exact purpose.
My users home directory is ephemeral as well, so this wouldn’t happen. Everything I didn’t declare to persist is deleted on reboot.
What I do use tools like these for is verifying that my persistent storage paths are properly bind mounted and files end up in the correct filesystem.
I use dust
for this, specifically with the -x
flag to not traverse multiple filesystems.
Unrailed!
ROCK & STONE, BROTHER!
Already played 500h+ of DRG with close friends that don’t live close by.
Great game to have fun, talk, but also challenging if you want it to be.
Can’t recommend it enough!
My /
is a tmpfs.
There is no state accumulating that I didn’t explicitly specify, exactly because I don’t want to deal with those kind of chores.
I don’t think they meant forcing themselves because their RAM would fill up, but because their stuff would be gone after rebooting if they didn’t move it.
DDG and Mullvad are private search engines as they strip out your trackable metadata and don’t pass on your IP address.
Is that so? How do you know?
Edit: Yeah, that’s what I thought.
I’m not using it at all, I use the *DAV functionality of my paid mail provider.
I did research on what solution I would use alternatively – with requirements very similar to the ones you proposed – and EteSync checked all the boxes, which is why I recommended it.
I set up an instance once, and it seemed to work just fine, but I haven’t thoroughly evaluated it.
Doesn’t that apply to any search engine?
I’ve been using SearXNG and its predecessor for years and I have no reason to change that. Highly recommend you check it out.
Why would you do that?