Yeah, I remember when it was $75 but didn't jump on it then. Back then I didn't think they'd ever charge for basic functionality that was offered for free for 10 years. I don't regret not getting it though, this is the kick I need over to Jellyfin.
bamboo
Let's Encrypt supports DNS verification, if you have access to update the zone file. It makes automation harder, but there are scripts to do the DNS update for the verification.
Was the price the same then as it is now? $120 USD? Based on the article, the price will only raise at the end of April.
Every one of the posts today that I've received have the url https://lemmy.laitinlok.com/pictrs/image/e1be7d9e-9e3e-4ba9-9c08-1ff084b554e1.png
. If everyone has the same links, then logging people's IP would get you the same information as logging IPs from a public post in any popular community. I think that would only make sense if each user was receiving different URLs, for the attacker to log the requested resource and their reference of which user they sent that URL to. I can't confirm this suspicion on my own, but if the URL I posted is the same one you got today, then I doubt there's any attempt to match users to their IP addresses.
Yess finally. Switched off of Chrome after seeing uBlock Origin was going to go away, but I have a lot of PWAs which has been hacky to get working.
There is no Starship Troopers 2
If you can sacrifice quality, you can encode the videos at a lower bitrate, but that is lossy compression, not lossless. Also, if your videos are in h.264 codec, then transcoding them to h.265 and preserving the quality may be a way to get the files smaller. You would use a tool meant for video, like Handbrake for this, and not winrar or other generic compression tool.
[Everyone Liked That]
That's what happens when you align yourself with Trump.
Please let this sink the stock even more.
The Wire is in the top 10 though?