a daily check is enough for most
Yeah I have to strongly disagree.
And then the opsec angle comes into play:
Which is why Proton’s notifications have been encrypted for years.
a daily check is enough for most
Yeah I have to strongly disagree.
And then the opsec angle comes into play:
Which is why Proton’s notifications have been encrypted for years.
…I mean for the bulk of apps, sure. For email though?
I’d recommend the Third Reality plugs instead. You can buy them right now, and probably for cheaper. And they’re smaller.
Get an app that does one thing very well rather than a mega app that tries to do everything.
I agree. I am not a fan of Nextcloud. Moved to OwnCloud a while back. No ragrets.
Probably OBS
Yes that’s incorrect. Open circuit voltage for solar panels can be in the hundreds of volts, but you’re never gonna put that into your battery. You’re gonna run it through a charge controller that will bring it down to a normal voltage. For a lead acid that will be somewhere around 13.6V and 14.4V for LFP.
That’s not correct. They can draw significantly more power when in use but also consume significantly less when not in use. You can use 2x SATA with this but you’re gonna spend more $$$/TB
For hardware I recommend this guy to everyone: CWWK N100 mini PC w/ 4xNVMe hat
Get 4x4TB NVMe drives and you’ll have 12TB usable storage + parity drive.
It also uses a 12V power supply.
I don’t understand. How do you provide someone else with information you don’t have?
My guy, how is it you think they are capturing and relaying data that they haven’t stored?
I don’t see anything in that article that says that Google store the contents of the notification
Not sure how you think they hand over information they don’t have?
They don’t store the notification they just relay it.
The data these two companies receive includes metadata, detailing which app received a notification and when, as well as the phone and associated Apple or Google account to which that notification was intended to be delivered. In certain instances, they also might also receive unencrypted content, which could range from backend directives for the app to the actual text displayed to a user in an app notification.
I think “hard” is the wrong word. After all, it’s just a matter of mashing the right combination of buttons on your keyboard. It’s complicated…
I just got a mini PC and put 5 disks in it and struggling with the same…
I would share it but I don’t know anyone else who even knows what it is, much less would want to use it. Sorry.
I use it and it works, that’s all I can say.
Why would I lie about this?
I tried the sliding sync servers as well. Those were included in “all of them”.
All of them
I am not trying to join an instance. I’m trying to use a web client for an instance I already have.
There are no screenshots, only artist renderings.
Okay, well, that sounds like a drawback to me?