Not sure if you’re talking about me but if so, touché because I definitely don’t believe that but now I look like a hypocrite. 😂
Not sure if you’re talking about me but if so, touché because I definitely don’t believe that but now I look like a hypocrite. 😂
Who even has this kind of time? Get a life
And probably anywhere between six months and three years from now 🙄
I don’t know, I still see a lot of people not knowing this. I’ve seen iPhone users get confused when I use Safari to go to a website rather than the Google app on their phone.
It’s really a shame because you just know that that Google app is just spyware.
I think it’s a CSS issue. Word wrapping won’t break apart the amount because it’s considered one “word.”
There are ways to address it though.
Source: I’m a full stack web application developer
Not a fan of Ronnie nor Donnie but DeSanctimonious was the most fucking stupid nickname
As a developer it’s quite shocking the grip AWS has on the internet. I run a side business that’s AWS-free and loving it, but its tentacles are probably behind everything I use as an end-user. Everything at my full-time job is built on AWS.
I’m so anti-Ubuntu but I would probably put that out there and roll with it. You can move on to something better once you figure it out anyway.
I don’t think I’d make that information public were I in their shoes. Wouldn’t that be a hint for anyone attempting to crack them?
I’m explaining why I’m a programmer for some context why I’m interested in technology, not to argue that all programmers hate gaming.
I was replying against the smug “you must’ve been born in the 2000s” comment. I’m arguing that not everyone is into gaming just because this is a technology community, and to maybe drop the attitude because someone isn’t cOoL like them because they were born earlier. 🙄
I was born in the late 1980s, can I know what it is?
Edit: Looks like a game. Are we assuming everyone in a technology community cares about video games? I’m a programmer but can’t get into video games at all.
I think the part you’re missing (and others haven’t addressed) is that you don’t send 100% of your traffic to one endpoint (much like how most use VPNs). You can route different things to different places.
For example, I’m in the US and have two Tailscale exit nodes. Both are located on VPS machines in the US, but one sends traffic down a double-hop VPN back out into the US, the other does the same but to Switzerland. My “default” route is through Switzerland (better privacy laws) but I am forced to route some things through the US exit node due to websites that won’t work outside the US. For my personal devices, traffic routes directly to them via WireGuard tunnels.
In addition, my wife doesn’t care about blocking everything that I do (social media, tracking) but her phone still needs to update sensors in Home Assistant. She can choose not to use the exit nodes but can still communicate with our nodes on Tailscale. She also uses it to print documents at home from her laptop while she’s at work.
Recently I was waiting in a hospital with public (unsafe) WiFi that blocked UDP traffic, but Tailscale does some magic that will relay traffic via TLS. I was able to access services at home with a 20ms latency. The tech is very, very nice to have.
I wonder how this works in other countries because I know it’s normal to do (what we call) ACH-to-ACH transfers.
I’m actually all for speeding up ACH and using it more often (rather than P2P transfers apps), but you raise a valid concern here.
Mint Mobile only works on T-Mobile. I’m wanting something that works on both. My wife is still on T-Mobile, and whenever we travel our state one when one of us has no signal, the other does. I’d like an MVNO that can automatically switch between the two.
Google Fi supports this but last I heard it doesn’t work on iPhone.
So yeah, I’m the opposite: I have high expectations if I’m going to switch.
I was a T-Mobile customer for awhile and am on AT&T now. In my region it’s always one or the other with the best coverage.
I was going to switch to Boost Infinite right before they became Boost. Still trying to figure out if Boost will work on AT&T, Boost, T-Mobile networks like Boost Infinite did because if they do, smell ya later (kinda) AT&T!
Yeah that was kind of a weird take, I’ve never felt it being slow nor heard it is from anywhere else.
I only have experience trying to run two Tailscale containers on the same machine and hit so many roadblocks that running it containerized just wasn’t worth it.
Containerizing is probably only worth it if you have an explicit need for it.
I don’t why but the fact this is on YouTube seems hypocritical but I can’t put my finger on it.