teleporters will have keys like vehicles and buildings, to prevent unauthorized access.
teleporters will have keys like vehicles and buildings, to prevent unauthorized access.
I like rsnapshot, run from a cron job at various useful intervals. backups are hardlinked and rotated so that eventually the disk usage reaches a very slowly growing steady state.
DEET works… but it’s worth mentioning that it will utterly destroy the polycarbonate lenses used for modern eyeglasses
it’s possible to run windows in a VM on Linux (Microsoft even provides one intended for developers)
is it counting android as linux?
if so, it shouldn’t be, imo. android is deployed and used differently than Linux and is not really the same in spirit. if you can’t have root, I’d not count it as Linux for the purposes of something like this.
Funtoo is a bit of both. It’s not as current as Gentoo but the tradeoff is not having to rebuild the toolchain every few weeks.
another tool is taxation. example: single use plastics are a bad thing and we don’t need them in most of the ways they’re used. taxing them will make them economically untenable and companies will look for alternatives.
your statement is highly dependent on where someone lives. I wonder what percent of people live within about ten minutes’ walking distance from useful public transportation. I bet it’s not 90% or even anywhere close. most people on Earth do live in cities now though, so maybe it’s ~50%…?
right but if you keep participating in broken systems you’ll just perpetuate them. gotta find ways out and take them… or make them.
that’s not necessarily what it means. some things legitimately are easier to explain in person. ever try working out a complicated mathematical argument in an email? one can do it, but it’s not pretty. in person you can write on paper, draw figures, etc., synchronously with your compatriot observing and even participating. it’s not merely a change of medium from text to sound.
I don’t read formality in these either, fwiw. in fact they’re generally pretty casual.
ultimately, you will need some kind of access to something with at least one port open, if you intend to host services on the clearnet. you could use tor if onion services will work for you. if you have ssh access somewhere with a port open (or a friendly sysadmin), you could tunnel to there and redirect incoming connections back through the tunnel. same thing with a VPN, if the sysadmin is really friendly.
syncthing works on every device and substitutes for cloud storage services. pictures taken with a phone end up quickly in the shared folder on my desktop. etc.
so write a Makefile that calls kubectl!