Some search engines let you block sites from future results. If I'm on my desktop, I'll knock out the obvious ones on the first page of a search. It's not much, but it's honest work.
My aar stack, openmediavault, and transmission stack have different usernames mapped to the same uid and it is a pain in the ass. I "fixed it" by making a NAS group that catches them all, but by "fixed it" I really mean "got it working"
So be aware of what uid will own a file and maybe change it to a uid in the 1100+ range to make NFS easier in the future.
And those demographics are very susceptible to marketing and peer pressure. The chat bubble colors are designed to make you think of alternative phone users as outcasts. Used to be the same with photos and videos in MMS.
By your late 20s most people don't give a shit about being labeled outcast, but by then you're locked into their ecosystem.
Never know when you're going to need one on a new moon on the ides of march formatted to apple_HFS to update the firmware on your cousins 2004 pioneer in-dash dvd player
DDR4 got so cheap, you could sprinkle it on a build like parmesan cheese. DDR5 is still relatively expensive. I see a lot of people landing on 48 gigs.
Moss Landing battery storage facility has repeatedly caught fire, which highlights another potentially major savings for grid operators, as the fallout of such events are instead borne by the operator of the battery, which for the DSGS would be the home owner.
You've watched Google,Facebook, and apple do it the last 20 years. If a good idea is spotted early enough, they buy the whole company before they can make it to market and grow to become a threat. It happens in any emerging tech and you're watching it happen now in the LLM space. Companies burn cash, waiting for their competitors to make a mistake or run out of money. Then they buy out the struggling company, absorbing any tech they might have, maybe some branding, but more importantly- their customers. Now they can jack up prices once market forces are eliminated. If not for the threat of anti-trust laws, you would see single company rule in every single sector. That is the end goal of a company- a monopoly that crushes potential competition and squeezes consumers.Railroads, telephone, petroleum, internet, airlines, all ended up as regional monopolies.
Some search engines let you block sites from future results. If I'm on my desktop, I'll knock out the obvious ones on the first page of a search. It's not much, but it's honest work.