Now it’s working.
Now it’s working.
503 Service Unavailable
No, use Tenacity instead.
So we started using that three assholes char?
What’s the problem? This will make Aurora Store more stable
It’s the best example in my opinion, because it is full of fake versions of popular piracy sites because Google hides the originals.
And it is the only site I know ddg shows certification every time.
Ddg already have this for some sites.
what OP is referring to is actually the “distributed” nature of git, where i.e. it’s easy to copy the entire history of an instance.
Exactly. Isn’t decentralized itself since it’s not a platform but by being “indipendent” and not entangled with anything you can just copy it entirely and host it somewhere else.
Yes but no, because I don’t want to not interact with a repo at all just because it’s on github for whatever reason (if there’s one).
But yes, I understand your feelings. Fuck M$
Git itself isn’t decentralized is about people copying it and sometimes mirroring it.
Anyway it is a good habit to avoid github entirely (when hosting a repo).
In their favor I can say that none of them are tech savvy and they got to know Threads just because Meta put Threads links and icons all over Instagram (which those people use).
That’s the most famous ActivityPub social just because people don’t know what federation is and that Threads implements it (disabled by default).
All IRL people who know Threads whom I asked what made Threads different from Twitter didn’t know about this feature.
With my MSI motherboard I use coolero which is now named CoolerControl and removed it from flathub, dunno why.
I found this talking about the tweet. Nothing more.
Upvoted for title.
I think you can actually test it with space.linuxct.hydra
Oh, gotcha. Was thinking about the peripheral type support rather than its actual lifetime.
Werent we talking about usb flash drives?
Since usb flash drives use usb, I think we can keep using them to store data i long term, rather than using floppy, cd or other analogic archive.
Official Xfce blog