

Oh good point. 14.9GB/s
Oh good point. 14.9GB/s
Run meshtastic on it
I wonder why they’re not using TB/s like 14.9TB/s
Edit: GB/s
And cars get far to hot already
Oh, okay. So I’m guessing that means like the car might turn on and run the air conditioner for a few minutes every hour. Just to cool itself down. That’s what it seems like anyway.
This might be a dumb question, but I think it’s worth asking anyway. How do they deal with the interior of the car getting as hot as a fucking blast furnace? Because if you leave a regular car out in the sun, it becomes like a fucking blast furnace when you open the door. Heat like that can actually cause interior damage, like cracking dashes and stuff. So if you have to leave this car out in the direct sun to charge, how do they avoid this problem? Like, I’m imagining you go to work, and your car is sitting in the work parking lot directly in the sun for hours a day. And it’s collecting power to drive you home, but it’s also massively heating up.
Doesn’t seem like many improvements to be had when it takes several terabytes to run one of the aggregators and increasing all the time.
In theory, yes. Blue Sky does run on a federated model. In practice, no. If the Blue Sky Corporation died, it would be gone. If I remember correctly, all direct messages go through them no matter where you have your home data and such.
Invest in making Risc-V better then
I hope to be able to use PeerTube more in the future, but at least for now. I can’t find the kind of content that I want to watch. I would like to see stuff similar to Android Authority and 9-5 Google. Kind of like how !android@lemdro.id created their own instance and community.
The way I see it, no PeerTube instance is ever going to replace YouTube. That would just be far too much data to store and far too much bandwidth to serve. But I figure there would be topic specific instances such as Android Authority and 9-5 Google on an Android specific PeerTube instance.
Things like Sneed Mobile Tech and Tech Life Channel talking about cellular networking would be on a PeerTube instance dedicated to network technology, and so on.
Yeah, I can understand that. There’s one Gemini browser I like on Android called Buran (fdroid), but it hasn’t been updated in several years, and there are some accessibility things with it while using the Talkback screen reader, which makes it somewhat annoying, and I don’t think it will be updated.
Also, there is no way to put in a Socks 5 proxy, so I can’t browse onion capsules with it.
Considering the road Firefox is going down, I am very happy for any alternative, so I’m looking forward to both of these. But I’ve also been playing around with the Gemini protocol, which looks really neat, although it’s very simple.
Monero does provide privacy because while it is a public blockchain, the sender is obscured, the receiver is obscured, and the amount is obscured. The IP address of the node is obscured.
To somebody not participating in the transaction, they basically see the equivalent of “? Sent ? Xmr to ?”
About damn time. This is a win for those of us who wish to use crypto as actual money and need privacy. Because not everybody should know the balance of your accounts. That’s just stupid. This is why the majority of my dealings with crypto are in Monero.
That’s an easy answer. It’s because it’s running Windows 11. Install Linux on it and it won’t suck anymore.
Keepassxc on pc and keepassdx on android
Yeah, i meant GB/s. Thanks for pointing that out.