"8gb ought to be enough for anybody"
r00ty
I did defederate from hexbear for a while a year or so ago. Just because at the time their users were generally just actively trolling for reactions in pretty much every community, and it just got too the point I defederated. I've since removed them from the defed list.
Generally I agree. But ML seems to have become a bit more clearly biased in their moderation. To me it's not a reason to defed, but a reason to view the content they do allow in their hosted communities with that bias in mind.
I know the OP is using wifi calling as a solution. But since we're talking voip providers.
I use voxbeam. But they're wholesale, you need a fixed IP for incoming calls, their support are good. But they're probably not going to want to help you with end-user type questions. They only support SIP. But, pricing is generally good and plenty of reasonably priced DID options.
That's unusual. In the UK it's generally only going to work if you're in the UK. When I connect to my VPN (in my house, so residential IP), it's hit and miss, the wifi calling icon will appear and disappear as it feels like. But otherwise it's generally locked down.
I seem to remember, training exercises was what they told the initial troops that went into Ukraine was happening. So, while I really doubt they will do anything. That's really not an indicator either way for Russia.
Well, mainly you just need to keep the EFI entirely separate. That's generally all you need. That's what windows will decide to wipe and reinstall. I just didn't do it this time. I think because of how disks were already partitioned.
I think it depends on the type of surveillance and what they intend to do with the data.
In the UK I think for example that you shouldn't expect to have any real privacy on a work owned laptop. But at the same time they need to inform employees what they're doing, and the reason for doing so. Usually this won't be made clear it's to ensure you are actively pressing buttons for your entire contracted work period. If they say it's for security and/or adherence to policy. They can really only use the data they obtain for those purposes.
Now in reality I can tell you it won't stop a lot of companies using the data for illegal reasons but wrapping the dismissal around another reason or, just turning it into a suspiciously specific redundancy (if you suddenly get moved into a position with a very unique title, personally it would set off alarm bells :P). This happens more than I think it should, where I work.
Cameras and the like again are fine if it is made clearly overtly that they are monitoring the area. Again they should provide a reason why. If they say it's for security (making sure people aren't stealing equipment, or people that shouldn't be in the office are there, or other illegal actions) then technically they should not use that personal data for other reasons. The same caveat above of course applies.
So, it's just a bit more complex in UK/EU I think. But, companies can always work around the rules and get what they want in other ways, and they know how to do it such that it's hard to prove otherwise.
Exactly.
My main concern when someone asks me that, is how many minutes it will really be.
I'm not using VST. There's a few games I got on Microsoft store some years ago which there's no way (yet) to make run in Linux (at least to my knowledge). But, I don't feel that much need to play them. At least not enough to boot into windows, complete the huge updates likely waiting and then fix the grub install afterwards just to play a game.
I have it as a dual boot option. But, it's not been booted since November. So I am assured I'll need to rerun grub when I do decide I need to boot it for something I cannot do in either Linux, or a Windows VM in linux (that's really a small number of things).
Pretty sure one of the first things musk did was kill off an entire (or more than one?) data centre. Pointing out with glee that it worked fine without it.
This is probably why it existed.
Still it's only twitter. No real loss.