@Nazareno
That's a very confusing article. E.g.
"Opponents of the war have pejoratively called the Z symbol a zwastika or zwaztika,"
"Opponents of the war" seems to refer to the US/NATO side keeping the war going.
"Z symbol a zwastika" - so what do they call the symbol painted on the tanks driven by Ukraine side?
@Nazareno What does the Z stand for?
@iam_jfnklstrm Have a friend or business partner in another city/state/country. Make net storage available to each other with your favorite protocol. WebDav (HTTP PUT) is dirt simple.
A simple starting point is for you and your peers to serve as DNS secondaries for each other.
@satan BINGO
@fedora @slimbook Oh man, @frameworkcomputer is coming to my region & now this!? #choices
@thelinuxEXP Just a nit pick here (but I think an important one): "Fedora" isn't proposing anything... Some folks are proposing telemetry _to_ Fedora (thats all of us in #fedora community).
@fedora If you have to trick your users into having telemetry by hoping they click through without noticing, YOU ARE THE BAD GUY.
@yet_another_neighbor@mastodon.social @fedora My requirement would be that the entire system should be an optional package. Then opt-in would mean installing the package, and opt-out would mean removing the package (even if it is installed by default).
@freemo @Theraviranjankr Perhaps you meant to say, "There is no such thing as an absolute position that is true." While I still disagree, that would at least be an interesting self-contradiction along the lines of "this statement is false", as opposed to having itself as an obvious counter example.
@freemo @Theraviranjankr "There is no such thing as an absolute position." <- an absolute position, exhibit 1.
@freemo That disagreement is how science advances into new knowledge. Historically, the majority has been wrong/incomplete by current theories.
The issue I have is not with the majority opinion, but with censoring the scientists with a minority opinion.
@freemo "scientific consensus" is an oxymoron.
@sdgathman @freemo Actually, I think that is 50 "caliber" - which is really hard to find a definition for. However, it seems to be .50 in. I.e. 127mm instead of 50mm - more than twice as big.