The difference between $0 and $50 isn’t really relevant.
The difference between $0 and $50 isn’t really relevant.
LetsEncrypt is legit. A downside is that the certs expire after 90 days. However, that also carries an upside in that it limits the damage in case a certificate is compromised. There are procedures by which you can automatically renew/request (I forget whether they allow renewing an existing cert or require a brand new one) LE certs and apply them to your application, but that can be fiddly to configure.
If you’re not comfortable with configuring automatic certificate cycling, a long-term paid cert would be more appropriate.
Could very well be, but worth talking to the association to make sure.
If you’re in a townhouse, you have an association. The association would be responsible for the common attic and its insulation. Bring this concern to the attention of the board. Could be other people have the same problem and the fix could be attic-related.
What if I’m an email administrator who came from Timex/Sinclair?
If you are accepting payments, you absolutely want to offload that to a third party payment processor, so that you don’t have to go through the hassle of doing PCI compliance.
If you choose any dishwasher, spend the extra money and get one that’s quiet. The cheapest ones are so loud that you can’t really enjoy anything else while they’re running. I’m willing to bet that quiet 18" dishwashers are pretty hard to come by.
I was going more for a “Linu Stars and Celebrities: What Do They Know? Do They Know Things?? Let’s Find Out!”
But that only spells “LINU”.
https://www.makeuseof.com/windows-limit-reservable-bandwidth/
It’s not as scary as it sounds.
Bad actors can afford $50 the same as good ones.