^ this People are very ignorant about what secure boot actually is.
^ this People are very ignorant about what secure boot actually is.
Good luck with all those vulnerabilities
More like it guarantees a minimum wage. Not sure how it works in the US, but where I’m from you still negotiate your pay even if you’re a member of a union.
I like ruby. Use it for a bunch of things at work.
raidz1. No issues so far. I’ve had some prior experience with zfs from work, so moving to it was a no brainer.
I’ve been using unraid for a few years. Super happy with it. Recently migrated from using their normal array to zfs since I got a hold of some enterprise SAS drives.
I’d love for valve to do to other markets, what they’ve done for the handhelds in terms of Linux. I could see the improvements they’ve made easily translate to something like a laptop or a set-top box.
Lemmy has replaced reddit completely for me. Sure the content isn’t exactly the same, but it doesn’t need to to be successful IMO.
Man, the US is weird sometimes. I don’t think I’ve ever had a data cap on my home internet.
Thats true. I’m not in an english speaking country so their news generally don’t reach me.
This is great. I don’t really care about the BBC since I’m not from or live in the UK, but more decentralization is always good.
I was in DC for a week back in 2017. Stayed in a suburban kind of area a bit outside the city center. It was super easy to get to from point A to B via the metro. Will visit again one day.
For an enterprise I would suggest working with a nextcloud partner. Unless they have a sizeable internal IT team of course.
Cloudflare tunnels! I use it to expose my nextcloud server to the internet. Works flawlessly.
ISA doesn’t matter as much as most people think it does. It’s all about how you implement it.