Gut möglich, dass die A/B testing betrieben haben, machen viele.
Gut möglich, dass die A/B testing betrieben haben, machen viele.
There are minecraft reverse proxies, so, yes, a http proxy will not work, but the general idea is still viable and doable with very little effort.
Set up a few domains all resolving to one IP. Run itzg/minecraft-router and use that to proxy the traffic to different servers based on the domain.
Also, they don’t even need a reverse proxy, but just resolve the domain name to the IP (in the simple case of one domain name per I0). That can be accomplished by hosting their own dns server, editing the hosts file or just pointing a public dns record at the private ip address, which will only work in their network,l.
Neat idea, I personally never used telegram but heard a lot of positive feedback about their ux. I only have a feeling that, at the protocol level, the two ecosystems might be too different to make it viable.
That’s just a feeling tho, so go for it.
No, it doesn’t really make sense for 2fa to have both factors in the same database, I use yubikeys with webauthn.
pass.
It’s simple and has frontends for all my usecases. It’s so simple, that you can extend it’s functionality yourself if you wish.
Synchronizing works by just synchronizing the folder where the data lives, so syncthing, git, dropbox, ftp. Whatever you like.
From Austria:
The amount of plastic waste you produce.
Every shopping trip you get (single use) plastic bags, every food item is packaged individually. Even your plates are often times made from plastic, as is the cutlery (sometimes).
All those plastic cups in every restaurant - it’s disgusting.
It’s insanity.
Also: general waste is labeled “landfill” in some places.
Halt and Catch Fire: It’s a really cool drama about a group of very different people, who come together because of one shared goal, and then everyone following their own desires - more or less burning bridges and rebuilding them over 4 seasons of the show.
Tuxedo is working on one, they said it might be ready by christmas.
Evolution, I wish I could use Thunderbird, but that crashes when signing mails with my Yubikey.
The fragment of a URL is not sent to the server, so that’s where such platforms usually store the key. That’s also the way cryptpad does it. You can thus share the URL and with it the key.
Of course, you still need to trust the platform. The sourcecode link at the bottom of the page links to https://github.com/timvisee/send who forked from mozilla/send and links back to the web page.