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A RasberryPi uses so little power when idleing that turning it on and off on demand makes not a whole lot of a difference. It is different though with OP’s x86 with spinning rust drives.
Admin on the slrpnk.net Lemmy instance.
He/Him or what ever you feel like.
XMPP: povoq@slrpnk.net
Avatar is an image of a baby octopus.
A RasberryPi uses so little power when idleing that turning it on and off on demand makes not a whole lot of a difference. It is different though with OP’s x86 with spinning rust drives.
So the entire page fails to load? Very odd. You run something like Pihole to filter the entire network traffic?
No, the images are clearly served over HTTPS here. I suspect it might be a disagreement over the exact version of TLS being used as I admit my configuration of that is a bit amateurish, but you must have configured some rather extreme hardening measures for that to have such a result.
Hmm, those should be all fine, but maybe another extension is the issue? Since you likely have it installed anyways, can you check if the images load in a clean Edge or Chromium browser?
Hmm, you are the first person complaining about this and I can’t seem to replicate it either.
What browser and operating system (incl. version) are you using?
Is there also a way to simulate splitscreen with that?
How else are you going to use it? Ok they have an hosted instance, but that’s not great for privacy and will break as soon as it gets somewhat popular as the sites usually have scraping protections.
This is quite useful to self-host: https://github.com/RSS-Bridge/rss-bridge
This really depends on your exact setup and might not be true for hardware raid.
Generally speaking, I would look into replacing that ageing raid with something more modern like Btrfs or ZFS where you are significantly more flexible with the drives used.
For you to understand: when you say “keep politics out of tech” that is an explicit political position and you are basically saying “politics for me, but not for you”. Or to put it in different terms: unspoken support for the status quo, is a deeply reactionary political position and you are trying to enforce this by “keeping politics out of tech”.
I have no problem understanding that scams need to look good for a while to attract victims…
Completely depends on your use, but it is basically ever growing and larger than the typical cheap VPS includes. A few tens of GBs at least.
Uhm, this is not very good advise, as the bridges especially often do not work well with non-Synapse homeserver implementations. And especially Conduit also has a very different way to setup appservices, so it becomes much harder to configure the bridges correctly.
That they can peg them to a currency like the USD. Unless you are the United States of America, that is literally impossible. But even if you discard that technical impossibility, none have even close to the assets required to even approximate a peg, so it is a scam both theoretically and practically.
Matrix needs fast storage, and a lot of it, even if you only use it for bridges. A RPi5 with a good amount of NVMe storage will probably work, but if you only want to use it for bridges I would rather recommend to set up an XMPP server with Slidge which gives you better clients and can run on a RPi4 easily.
No, I am rejecting the notion of stable coins, which are by their own definition literal scams. But I am strongly suspecting that you are directly involved in such scams as you continue to muddle it with entirely unrelated issues just so to make it sound like this is a general problem and not a stable coin specific one.
You are either so deep in the bezzle that there is no point in discussing this further or are actively involved in scamming others yourself. If it is the former, I feel sorry for you.
If you can’t see how the snake bites its own tail here I can’t really help you, but on-chain “assets” do nothing for a stable coin that needs to be secured by off-chain assets.
You can make your own open-source games, it’s pretty fun. And of course there are loads of games that have no telemetry what so ever.
If you only use it so rarely, why not just connect a USB drive to your network router? Most have an option to serve files from that over the network.