You should write a post if you do. Would be funny!
You should write a post if you do. Would be funny!
Unfortunately Cloudflare does not do .ca domains. I imagine this is because there are restrictions on who can own one, so it’s probably not worth the trouble for them.
I checked out the main feed, OP. Not sure this is going anywhere based on the content I saw. I have no opinion on the site as a technical work.
For what reason? Just curious. Don’t use them for anything critical.
Yup, thanks for the correction
I believe cocks.li is still open, so you could use them. You said in another reply that you’re not savvy enough for your own domain, but if you change your mind, purelymail.com With your own domain, you can easily switch providers without losing access to your addresses.
That’s a good point, but I don’t figure this theoretical application would be big enough for any manufacturer to care about. I just wanted something for the people :-)
I think an open-source general device benchmark would be cool. Including CPU / GPU / Battery life metrics. As far as I know, everything that does this is proprietary.
As mentioned in the post, from three sources. The two site dimps were publicly available as torrents. The third was distributed privately.
I mean yeah, Hexchat does work pretty well and is kind of finished. But it’s possible there are existing security vulnerabilities or new ones to be discovered in the future.
Just to let you know, Hexchat is no longer maintained, unless someone has forked it. Might be worth looking into alternatives.
Gitlab has an official one: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/cli I don’t think Forgejo or Gitea have an official one, but there are various projects if you search around, along with SDKs for the API targeting various languages, so anyone could make one.
What about codeberg? It is free and forgejo is easy to use.
I checked and this is not present on my device. It is an unlocked Google Pixel 6a purchased via contract with the mobile provider. That said, I factory reset the device when I got it, so it may have been removed at that time.
You generally want to use a model which has been fine tuned to work around the inbuilt censorship. There are plenty available on huggingface currently. It’s not a perfect solution, but works well enough for what it is.
I would suggest using the llama.cpp backend with a frontend of your choosing.
Like others, I had an account before this was implemented. I have a couple projects on there, also mirrored to self hosted gitea. Have had people refuse/unable to contribute to the gitlab project due to the kyc requirement, so I’m thinking I will migrate to codeberg soon.
That looks like a web hosting provider, not a VPS.
I know that DO does require KYC, not sure about Vultr.
Namecheap does not. I have a VPS with them, paid via crypto, and they don’t have any real details about me.
Second Arch. I’m running it on my EOL chromebook with coreboot now. Everything works as intended.
I have Arch running on an old Acer chromebook, different model but similar hardware. If you’re alright with some manual configuration, then it’s a good option. it fits the lightweight requirement, but not sure about low maintenance.