

Try it, find out.
Try it, find out.
I’m not familiar with that program. How does it determine “throttling”?
I don’t personally use tape, but I get most of my stuff from eBay. Tape drives are surprising expensive, even LTO-6 is going to run you a few hundred. But you still can’t beat the density and longevity.
Tape. Amazon glacier if you’re okay with that.
And regular test restores. An untested backup is not a backup.
But when considering what I need to back up, I usually overestimate how much I or other people will care if it’s lost. Family photos are great, but what are the odds of someone saying “damn I wish we still had two dozen photos of that one barbecue?”
…but still fails to answer the question of “should we continue implementing kernel things in rust”.
Probably none. This is a MITM attack, so they need to be between you and the device. Usually that’s done by being on the local network, though it could also be someone who has compromised your router/firewall appliance.
Of course, you should never expose services like this to the Internet. If you need remote access, use a VPN.
In a relevant way, or in the US way where it wouldn’t have stopped this kind of attack?
Or Qemu if you want a similar interface.
I’m not a doctor, so I don’t.
Docker: ouroboros. Linux: unattended-upgrades or dnf-automatic. Windows: MECM.
I know those FOSS ones aren’t centralized, but I find it a lot easier for them to just update themselves as necessary.
I have automatic updates on everything. If it breaks, I fix it when I have time. If I don’t, it remains broken.
I could also just not do updates, but I like new features.
You might need to lower your expectations
It wasn’t focusing on anything. It was generating text per its training data. There’s no logical thought process whatsoever.
I saw one yesterday (on another platform, not Lemmy). He just reiterated the same points, then gave a shrug emoji and stopped replying.
Is it feasible to self host websites
yes
for small businesses
NOPE
Well, you say your business sites, so I assume you’re okay with downtime. I would absolutely not self-host sites for someone else’s business, because if something happens to the hosting (ISP outage, power outage, bad update, hardware failure, accidental deletion, misconfiguration, ISP block, flood/fire/storm, theft, I can go on) then it’s my ass on the line. Simple hosting is cheap, spend the few bucks for a lot more peace of mind.
What manual hooks? All the systems I’ve used LE certs in have supported fully automatic DNS challenges.
Either this means you won’t get future updates, or future updates will still overwrite your change. The proper way to do this would be to mount your own config over the one in the container, though this may have negative effects if the container config changes in the future. You might be able to mount /dev/null over the log file if you don’t care about the logs at all.
I don’t believe there’s any way to specify modifications to someone else’s containers without making your own image, unfortunately.
Well this code would be maintained by developers who know rust, so it sounds like a good merge to me!
Is rust more maintainable than C?
I just use a Chromecast and use my phone to cast from Jellyfin on my home server right to the Chromecast. No fiddly bits.