Except imessage and facetime are end-to-end encrypted in China.
Except imessage and facetime are end-to-end encrypted in China.
While I’ve never used it personally I’ve heard good things about cloudflare tunnel.
That’s cool, I’ve been passively wanting a brew/apt alternative for windows for years. I had no idea Microsoft made one.
In some cases we’re talking about people making $2.13 an hour in a country where you’re easily paying $1,000 a month or even more for a studio apartment. I’d say if you don’t tip you’re the bad guy.
This type of change isn’t going to come from people just deciding that waitstaff should starve and refusing to tip. If anything it will come from unionization of waitstaff or from legislation.
There’s nothing inherently wrong with windscribe but I don’t trust any company that offers a cheap lifetime plan for something that requires so much upkeep.
They don’t advertise it, just message support from your .edu email and tell them your username. They’ll apply it and let you use the STUDENT promo code. It’s 50% off the year plan so $5 a month.
Apple wallet
Basically 3 good choices
ProtonVPN AirVPN IVPN
Proton has a 50% off student discount bringing the price down to $5 a month for all proton services.
IVPN is probably the best but most expensive.
I’d say past security breaches are enough reason to stay away.
Memmy on iOS is very much like Apollo. A bit buggy but a great start.
Mlem really didn’t satisfy me.
The bidet has a hot air dryer. Truly living in the future.
Best way is probably just to leave it running for a while and make sure ports are forwarded.
I still use torrents sometimes but almost exclusively use Usenet these days. For Plex/jellyfin servers it’s pretty unbeatable.
Torrents are mostly stuff like audiobooks from audiobookbay and myanonymouse and games from repackers like Fitgirl.
I mean usenet costs money and torrents don’t.
When my Muslim coworker told me that they didn’t use toilet paper and found it disgusting.
I later got a bidet and have never looked back.
I really don’t think that 3rd party apps were anything but collateral damage. I think his real goal is to try and capitalize off of AI training.
He clearly saw these companies using reddit data to train AI for like no money and got upset.
On reddit, half of the users are bots controlled by various corporations and state departments.
It’s open source.
This is Korea all over again.
Yeah I don’t know about that, it rolled out globally a month later.