If you’re this paranoid for your backups, I’d just go with AWS Glacia and dump all your encrypted data twice a year. You can get a TB of backup for about 1 € / month.
If you’re this paranoid for your backups, I’d just go with AWS Glacia and dump all your encrypted data twice a year. You can get a TB of backup for about 1 € / month.
Dumbass didn’t encrypt the chats and didn’t do moderation according to local laws. If Facebook did the same as his company did, Mark Zuckerberg would share his fate.
Get M-discs. It’s a special type of Blu-ray that lasts for hundrets if not thousands of years. You can use a regular Blu-ray burner to write to it.
M-Disc Blu-rays last a thousand years literally. It will outlive all of your other mediums a hundred-fold.
Nobody needs marketing people.
So why didn’t they write that? It’s a bad documentation if someone doesn’t understand it. If you’re not going to explain something, at least share a source to where it’s explained.
What’s bad about Docker? It’s secure and easy to setup.
Your hate comment lacks vital information just like the docs shared by OP.
That’s the kind of arrogant attidude that makes many docs of open-source projects so shitty. If you think that preliminary knowledge about something is required then at least share a link to a source where you can learn it. Docs that require you to puzzle the missing pieces together on your own are shitty docs. A good documentation is a documentation that everyone understands, regardless of their level of knowledge.
Wtf do they mean by shared secret for example?
I’m gonna make my life extra hard just to make a point against capitalism…
And 90% of it is R&D.
And you’re not the average gamer. You’re probably more of an average Linux user.
Your comment just shows how disconnected this community really is sometimes.
I’ve used both for 10 years. So I’m in a better position to compare both. I’m a software dev and hobby sys admin.
How is skill related to booting up an OS and launching a game? That should not require skill.
Besides, I’m probably more skillful with Linux. I could probably fix all of these issues. I just won’t. It’s much faster booting into Windows.
Not on stock Ubuntu. Don’t believe me? Reproduce with:
What else do you want me to say? The benchmarks seem to be wrong I guess.
Thanks for sharing your experience. But I don’t share that. All of my devices and games run perfectly well out of the box. Heavily modded or not. On stock Ubuntu it doesn’t. Nothing else to say.
Everyone who says Windows is a viable alternative as a daily driver for things other than using Microsoft Word or Microsoft Excel is just delusional.
Thanks for bringing that up too. Because this is another prime example of popular software not running well on Linux. I’m not using that software though. I mostly just use the browser features of my Nextcloud instance for that. But browsers work just fine on Windows. Right… not even that works on Linux properly. Try watching DRM content on Firefox Linux or getting the hardware acceleration to work.
Nah man. I’m not a beginner with Linux. I’m using Ubuntu Server for hosting multiple docker images, a webserver, a Nextcloud, a professional Minecraft server. But I’m not using Linux Desktop anymore. If I need Linux for something terminal-related like easy ssh access to my server or git, then I’ll just boot up a subsystem on Windows.
Delusional.
I’ve been using Linux for over 10 years for work and dev. But for gaming it’s still absolute dogshit. You need to constantly tinker to get shit to work.
So this basically leaves me with half of my game library than on Windows, half of my gaming hardware, no sound, and a worse performance even in Minecraft.
Everyone who says Linux is a viable alternative as a daily driver for things other than software dev or sys admin is just delusional.
Obviously.
Featureset looks nice but the UI looks horrendous and dated.
I assumed you’re only paying per GB storage. At least that’s what their S3 pricing page says. I believe transfer cost only applies if you transfer from one S3 solution to another. I’m not using it myself, so I don’t know the details. Please correct me if I’m wrong.
If you depend on AWS you’re doing something wrong. You should at least adher to the 3-2-1 backup plan. If you do so, you can switch away from AWS any time they change their policy.