Arf! I’m Tony Bark. Artist and writer by day. Programmer by night. Gamer all the way.
Most of the reoccurring outlets I cite have an RSS feed that I subscribe to. Research is sourced from Science Daily.
That’s odd. Let me switch to an archive.
Updated the post with details. While I’m not entirely familiar with the matter, this does seem to affect versions below 128 and 115.13 ESR.
Yeah. There’s a whole section dedicated to showing varies nodes in the network.
I’ve tried Yacy plenty of times in the past. It seems to get the job done the best, in my opinion, and gives you a lot of control.
Oh… Oh! Well, that is creative.
Completely missed the point I was making, but okay. Thanks.
These companies are anything but “public”. Just because they go on the stock market, doesn’t change their primary interests: money.
Before self-hosting web apps became one-click install away, Ubuntu was a lot more convenient with newer technologies, readily available documentation, and a clear update schedule. At least, that was my case.
I feel sorry for whoever is still living in Russia.
While I completely agree with you on the asshole part, you also have to factor in that right now the Pi still remains the most dominant hardware in that category. Furthermore, I think you’re missing the point of what makes a hobby… a hobby.
The motherboard is so freakin’ tiny compared to the actual battery, there really is no reason for it not to be swappable.
“Hello, my name is Pandora, and today I’m going to show you what’s in my box.”
Generally speaking, yes. My home server is just a Pi.