That must have something to do with like A/B testing or something. Like she’s in the guinea pig cohort where she gets the “experimental” routes.
I’m Hunter Perrin. I’m a software engineer.
I wrote an email service: https://port87.com
I write free software: https://github.com/sciactive
That must have something to do with like A/B testing or something. Like she’s in the guinea pig cohort where she gets the “experimental” routes.
Interesting. I’ll let him know. Thanks.
Those invisible intangible barriers can be tricky like that.
Wow, that’s strange. Have you tried comparing the routes it gives you to the same places, side by side?
Linux, but sometimes I have to use Windows.
As an email guy, I would love IPv6, but it just isn’t gonna happen.
Worse, probably, because your PC doesn’t have a lot of the sensors your phone does. But I guess it depends on what you’re trying to keep private.
Backups and rollbacks should be your next endeavor.
Well, it is subaddressing, but has more related features on top of that. It automatically labels emails based on the address, and allows you to set some settings for that label, like mark as read, send push notifications, show in the “Aggbox” (the equivalent of the inbox), and screen new senders. That last one is important, because it means you can use labels for communicating with real people, and labels for getting email from automated senders (like your account email).
Right now, it’s a progressive web app. I’m working on a mobile app and IMAP support (so it will work with any email client). I’m also working on custom domain support, so you can bring your own domain and if you end up wanting to move somewhere else, you can keep all the same addresses you set up.
If it doesn’t, I would consider that a bug in the router.
Routers are not particularly known for being free of bugs.
I make an email app called Port87. It’s better than any other email apps (imo), because it organizes all your email for you.
It’s still behind a waitlist, because I’m working out the kinks (damn kinky software).
Yes, indiscriminate bombing is a war crime.
Hub is their core set of groupware apps for Nextcloud. They’re all tightly integrated. It came out with Nextcloud 18.
https://nextcloud.com/blog/the-new-standard-in-on-premises-team-collaboration-nextcloud-hub/
Nextcloud has had some amazing updates recently. Adding Nextcloud Hub comes to mind.
Reolink has a local encrypted video doorbell.
Technically, yes, but only in that your battery can be explosive, given the right circumstances. Really, they’re more highly combustible than explosive. They can burn very very hot and very quickly, but they won’t detonate.
That only works with non-first past the post voting systems.
Ultimately, you can’t. Even if everything you’re doing is encrypted, they have access to the RAM that’s holding your encryption keys.
If you want cheap encrypted storage you can run a Nephele server with encryption and something like Backblaze B2.
What I use for a lot of my sites is SvelteKit. It has a static site generator. If you like writing the HTML by hand, it’s great. Also HTML5 Up is where I get my templates. I made the https://nymph.io website this way. And https://sveltematerialui.com.