

This news looks outdated to me (saw it several months ago).
Last week some researchers set the bar at 22 minutes: https://lemmy.ml/post/26231805
Also on Mastodon: @pedroapero@mastodon.top
Want to send me a tip? XMR:89oiUKyACFZ655sTikh42RF8wpd46EQDmbTQUQiHHRWFEatjp5xxj4tZBhMMfjC4X45qvq4EdEGXkBsdxT1kP9xyVia8mPD
This news looks outdated to me (saw it several months ago).
Last week some researchers set the bar at 22 minutes: https://lemmy.ml/post/26231805
I primarily buy used drives. Depending on your area, you might find buyers easily for your old 4TB+ ones.
Could you specify wether these support physical keyboards? (showing only a toolbar when one is detected). I’m using the default proprietary Kika-keyboard on my device and it’s not great. Microsoft Swiftkey works but is not perfect and not FLOSS.
Also the “auto normalize” option (true by default and only shown in advanced settings) can mess-up with your source files. Mouting source files read-only won’t work either as it is creating files in source folders.
I don’t think advertising here is necessary 😉
These IPFS issues are basically UI-related. You wouldn’t expect a torrent to start within 2 seconds. You wouldn’t expect your torrent to be shared autonomously either. Technically, sharing IPFS hashes along with release names (similar to the crc32 on pre databases) would be very efficient, if only it was popular with a proper UI and indexing tooling. These hashes could even be signed by scene groups in the nfo.
It is not anonymous and suffers network fragmentation. Yet the force of Bittorrent is its large community and mature performant tooling (compared to IPFS).
I’d say yes. The user base / visibility of i2p torrent is pretty limited though. You can have a look at the Postman i2p tracker.
Sounds overkill just for backing up files.
Agree on Wireguard. It is faster, more stable and most likely more secured than SSH. And it will work with any application (no per-application configuration required). Without a third party tunneling service, you will need to expose a port in any case (you can setup port-knocking if you want to).
DHT is autonomous and does not require a tracker. Usually it is only used as a fallback as a regular tracker is quicker. It’s p2p, and is split accross people hosting it.
I am doing 5-10$ rounds of donations (4-10 projects each generally) to my favourite projects too on a regular basis. I favor XMR transactions as is it largely accepted those days and fees are appropriate for such low amounts.
I use Gthumb for simple edits (croping, resizing, rotating…).
I’m fine with Rofi. I’ve used xfce4-appfinder also, it’s less minimal, not configurable (good graphical defaults, might be what you want).
I guess if the copyright trolls got their way, there would be no general purpose computing.
Exactly. These kinds of statements are so naive.
I use BTRFS for the same. Being able to check for and repair silent corruptions is a must (and this is without needing to read the whole drives, only the actual files). I’ve had a lot of them over the years, including (but not only) because of a cheap USB controller also.
Every Door
thank you for sharing, definitely the easiest for Android from my research :-)
Note: there is a comparison of editor apps here: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Comparison_of_editors
The feature looks made ugly on purpose though (compared to organic maps where you can just download the whole country or select more precisely what you want)
Hi, thanks a lot, I’ll sure try them both!
This is ridiculous. On a large torrent, a single piece can contain dozens of books. Pieces are contiguous unencrypted data. One piece contains several pages in any cases. What if I set my maximum ratio to 0.999, am I allowed to seed then?