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AFAIK, they only offer the opt-out form in the EU and UK
reject humanity, become toaster | she/they | experimenting with names
AFAIK, they only offer the opt-out form in the EU and UK
There’s about 70 episodes 1-3 minutes each
Note: not every provider supports this.
Also, gmail addresses ignore periods. my.email@gmail.com and myem.ail+service@gmail.com will end up in the same inbox
To be fair, the store employees were getting attacked by homophobes over the items. It is very understandable corporate doesn’t want to risk further violence.
Still, I agree that those are exactly the places the support is needed the most in.
I raise 10 metre crossbow shooting
So, how long until they delete the comment section outright?
nah, keep the new instructions
Perhaps the Arch Linux repo has a “preview” version then, because I was able to add scribbles and text anywhere for many months by now…
Call me crazy, but hasn’t this been a feature for a while now?
I think SFTP would work plenty. On linux you can use rclone to mount it, and Android has many file managers that support it (personal favorite is Total Commander with the SFTP plugin)
You could also certainly host a full Nextcloud instance, but it might be a bit overkill
Den Zuhause Ordner schon
You can use a DNS challenge to show you are in control of the domain without having anything exposed to the net. Essentially LE gives you a special value you have to add as a TXT DNS entry. LE will check if this record exists for your domain, and gives you a certificate, no public IP involved. This even allows you to create wildcard certificates.
I use sendgrid, it only requires some DNS entries for Domain Authentication. Also regarding the catch-22, if you use Cloudflare for DNS, you could use their email routing to forward incoming mails to Gmail
Reverse Polish Notation works almost like you describe. You put the operands first, then the operation. For example:
Probably the reason why we are not using it is because most tools today use algebraic notation, and it would be a lot of effort to switch
Input means the packet stops at the router, like when you access its web ui. I don’t think you want to give the internet access to your router settings :)
yes, lan is the Local Area Network, wan is the Wide Area Network. The zone lan refers to the devices on the local side, wan to the great internet.
Yes, but why would you want to? We have enough addresses for the foreseeable future.