chrome : chromium :: vscode : vscodium
That’s a good pun. Clearly the authors have mastered the second hardest problem in computer science.
chrome : chromium :: vscode : vscodium
That’s a good pun. Clearly the authors have mastered the second hardest problem in computer science.
Google is at fault here for creating the software-defined garbage, but they’re not literally selling the products, are they?
I didn’t find an alternative, when I looked a few months ago.
There is a USB-C IR blaster that exists, but the Tiqiaa/ZaZaRemote app is awful.
I was using voip.ms last year when they were DDoS’d for over a week, by a group demanding payment via anonymous crypto. The DDoS ended when they switched to CloudFlare (which was probably pretty difficult because they’re a SIP provider.)
Almost any website with a small number of servers is vulnerable to this attack, which happens to be great business for CloudFlare. I wonder which companies are most effectively competing with CloudFlare?
Android still doesn’t support DHCPv6 and will be left without a valid address.
RFC 7934 explains their reasoning, though it’s not exactly an ironclad argument.
https://lemmy.one/c/meta is the relevant community for that question.
I’m connected to 2a01:4f9:3a:178f::2
now. Thanks.
My methodology was: go to https://lemmy.world, hit “All”, look at IPvFoo.
So I guess my definition of a major instance is one with enough content to reach the front page of lemmy.world.
135.181.143.230 is Hetzner. I think they have decent IPv6 support.
Given that every instance sees content from all the others, won’t the cost per instance grow with the total number of users? If there are 500M global lemmy users, how much would it cost to run a “small” instance to process that firehose of data?
I haven’t had the courage to run executable code from P2P networks since the early 2000s. Even then it was probably a bad idea.