Wouldn't it be wiser to get out of the market into fixed rate assets like government bonds? Maybe have some into puts on SPY (or QQQ since tech would probably have bigger losses) too, but mainly getting out of long…
Not until they get fined pennies on the dollar in a few years and then spend more time in court fighting it until they are actually required to pay said fine, at which point it doesn't matter anyway.
Yes, this price hike is only for new servers or if you rescale, unlike the one in April that applied to everyone.
Spain https://speedtest.rediris.es/
The thing is, in many cases the provider selling internet to you isn't the same as whoever owns the cables that arrive to your place. So you may switch between providers (which in Spain are owned by 4 groups: MasOrange,…
Yeah, I'll let a company I don't do business with dictate who I actually do business with just because of their money interests. I don't like or use Cloudflare, I believe they are not good for the internet due to how…
We can call it "abuse of market position" then. The United States' Federal Trade Commission[^1] sued Amazon in 2023 with this pretext. In Germany, the Federal Cartel Office fined Amazon[^2] 59 million euro (68.7…
> It’s just yet another centralized service Yeah, collaboration usually requires some sort of centralisation. Whether that is the LKML+git.kernel.org, gitlab.gnome.org, salsa.debian.org or Sourcehut, or GitHub. At least…
> Do you also dislike the concept of requiring to be a certain age to say enter a strip club or a sex club? You can't compare someone checking your document before entering a strip club (or even a pub, or asking for…
Some also hijack the shortcuts to open devtools (like F12), so you have to find the option in the browser menu itself
What do you miss about Google Maps in OSM? Just business information (schedules, contact info, reviews...), or something else?
Google allows you to use TXT to verify though, since this "feature" of disabling domains because of Safe Search is based only on web contents (A/AAAA/CNAME) they could disable those and allow TXT anyway since those are…
The problem is "markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent". It doesn't matter when the bubble pops if the governments (especially the US') bail those companies out. The damage is already being done,…
How does `just` compare to Task (https://taskfile.dev/)?
Depends on what features of teams you use, since it kind-of became an "everything" app
Why reinvent the wheel when there are already open standards like Matrix or XMPP that can be adapted to your use case?
Yeah, and in his mind the only social networks that exist are Telegram and Twitter. Mastodon doesn't exist, bluesky doesn't either, rr any of Meta's products (including Threads, direct competitor to Twitter with…
It's not about it being hard, it's about delegating. Many companies are a bit less sensitive to pricing and would rather pay monthly for someone else to keep their database up, rather than spending engineering hours on…
End-to-end usually means only the data's owner (aka the customer) holds the keys needed. The term most used across password managers and similar tools is "zero knowledge encryption", where only you know the password to…
At this point, end-to-end encryption is a solved problems when password managers exist. Not doing it means either Microsoft doesn't care enough, or is actually interested on keeping it this way
It's not. Regulation (EC) No 1370/2007[^1] states in the annex, related to compensation in cases where a public operator operates subsidised public services and commercial, for-profit activities, that: >In order to…
France, for example, has been trying to delay allowing Renfe (Spanish operator) to operate through the country as much as possible, while their public operator SNCF (branded as Ouigo) has been able to operate here since…
Every government in Spain for the last decade or more has been cutting corners in maintaining the rail networks: high speed (where this accident happened), the conventional network and commuter rail. You failed to…
On the other hand, it may end up the other way: pressure you or bully you into quitting yourself. Here in Spain it happens sometimes: firing you is expensive and they don't want you around for whatever issue, so they'll…
I'd say engineers are at fault for bugs and performance issues, as well as poor UX (not counting what's made to sell you something or collect your data)
Wouldn't it be wiser to get out of the market into fixed rate assets like government bonds? Maybe have some into puts on SPY (or QQQ since tech would probably have bigger losses) too, but mainly getting out of long…
Not until they get fined pennies on the dollar in a few years and then spend more time in court fighting it until they are actually required to pay said fine, at which point it doesn't matter anyway.
Yes, this price hike is only for new servers or if you rescale, unlike the one in April that applied to everyone.
Spain https://speedtest.rediris.es/
The thing is, in many cases the provider selling internet to you isn't the same as whoever owns the cables that arrive to your place. So you may switch between providers (which in Spain are owned by 4 groups: MasOrange,…
Yeah, I'll let a company I don't do business with dictate who I actually do business with just because of their money interests. I don't like or use Cloudflare, I believe they are not good for the internet due to how…
We can call it "abuse of market position" then. The United States' Federal Trade Commission[^1] sued Amazon in 2023 with this pretext. In Germany, the Federal Cartel Office fined Amazon[^2] 59 million euro (68.7…
> It’s just yet another centralized service Yeah, collaboration usually requires some sort of centralisation. Whether that is the LKML+git.kernel.org, gitlab.gnome.org, salsa.debian.org or Sourcehut, or GitHub. At least…
> Do you also dislike the concept of requiring to be a certain age to say enter a strip club or a sex club? You can't compare someone checking your document before entering a strip club (or even a pub, or asking for…
Some also hijack the shortcuts to open devtools (like F12), so you have to find the option in the browser menu itself
What do you miss about Google Maps in OSM? Just business information (schedules, contact info, reviews...), or something else?
Google allows you to use TXT to verify though, since this "feature" of disabling domains because of Safe Search is based only on web contents (A/AAAA/CNAME) they could disable those and allow TXT anyway since those are…
The problem is "markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent". It doesn't matter when the bubble pops if the governments (especially the US') bail those companies out. The damage is already being done,…
How does `just` compare to Task (https://taskfile.dev/)?
Depends on what features of teams you use, since it kind-of became an "everything" app
Why reinvent the wheel when there are already open standards like Matrix or XMPP that can be adapted to your use case?
Yeah, and in his mind the only social networks that exist are Telegram and Twitter. Mastodon doesn't exist, bluesky doesn't either, rr any of Meta's products (including Threads, direct competitor to Twitter with…
It's not about it being hard, it's about delegating. Many companies are a bit less sensitive to pricing and would rather pay monthly for someone else to keep their database up, rather than spending engineering hours on…
End-to-end usually means only the data's owner (aka the customer) holds the keys needed. The term most used across password managers and similar tools is "zero knowledge encryption", where only you know the password to…
At this point, end-to-end encryption is a solved problems when password managers exist. Not doing it means either Microsoft doesn't care enough, or is actually interested on keeping it this way
It's not. Regulation (EC) No 1370/2007[^1] states in the annex, related to compensation in cases where a public operator operates subsidised public services and commercial, for-profit activities, that: >In order to…
France, for example, has been trying to delay allowing Renfe (Spanish operator) to operate through the country as much as possible, while their public operator SNCF (branded as Ouigo) has been able to operate here since…
Every government in Spain for the last decade or more has been cutting corners in maintaining the rail networks: high speed (where this accident happened), the conventional network and commuter rail. You failed to…
On the other hand, it may end up the other way: pressure you or bully you into quitting yourself. Here in Spain it happens sometimes: firing you is expensive and they don't want you around for whatever issue, so they'll…
I'd say engineers are at fault for bugs and performance issues, as well as poor UX (not counting what's made to sell you something or collect your data)