Because nobody has written the code to make it “not function like that”.
I’m here!
Because nobody has written the code to make it “not function like that”.
I don’t think so. Two paid upgrades in eight years.
It works. End of thoughts.
Lemmy.world is hosted in Finland. 230 is not applicable.
Lots of steps to “figure it out”. Could’ve just pinged the hostname.
Not a big secret. Pretty sure they even announced it.
I like to save them for a rainy day when I need an OCD fix.
Chicken and egg. The tuitions have been able to reach the insane heights due to the ready availability of these loans.
It was a lot harder to get loans thirty years ago. Almost on par with the criteria for any other personal loan. A four year CompSci degree that could be had for under $25K, in total, opened the door to a $45K to $60K entry level position for a typical graduate.
Availability of loans broke wide open, under the guise of providing opportunity, and now the same degree costs 5-10x with yet the typical entry level salary remains more or less the same, give or take a few inflation points.
Agreed. I’ve probably got 100 keys registered with GitHub and 98 of them the private key is long destroyed due to OS reinstalls or whatnot. Format machine, new key. New machine, new key.
As you suspect, only during the sixty or so seconds that they are valid.
SMS-based codes tend to be longer lived.
They’re useless without your other authentication factors, e.g. login, password.
Because every OS they ship with they need to support. Lenovo already has a viable, cost effective, support model for endlessos because they ship and support it for educational customers.
It’s not commercially viable for them support other OS that there is near no demand for relative to their overall sales.
Your assertions are not supported by industry analysis.
While this years survey is closed, the results haven’t been published. In last year’s survey, MacOS slightly edged out Linux, moving to second place.
Disabling IPv4 isn’t going to do anything to move IPv6 forward. You’re just shutting those who remain limited to IPv4 through no fault of their own.
Lemmy, itself, does NOT collect or store IP addresses. You won’t find this information in the Lemmy database/application.
However, your IP address will be captured in the webserver logs themselves, which is typical for any connections to any webserver.
No worries. The sorting and filtering algorithms definitely need some love.
You’re following up to a post made almost 3 months ago so it’s not surprising you’ve seen similar since.
Can’t speak for kbin but Lemmy doesn’t collect or store IP addresses at all.
Aka PATA or IDE hard disks. Basically consumer grade kit.
The statement that the kernel would only ever handle IDE was basically a confession that this would never be a product suitable for enterprise or professional use where SCSI was the typical interface.
And plenty who don’t know you can GNU without Linux.