With the files-from-mail app, you can set up an email address so that all attachments sent to it are stored in your #nextcloud for easy access! https://apps.nextcloud.com/apps/files_frommail
I hear the "you shouldn't have to learn how your engine works just to drive a car" argument often used to counter my insistence on learning git's internals to understand its externals.
My response: git is a tool for professionals. Racecar drivers should definitely understand how engines work. Amateur users of version control systems are using the undo and redo buttons in a Google Document. Git is a professional tool and if you're a professional then you have a professional obligation to learn your tools properly.
@Canageek Thank you 🤗 . Probably all of my December Speedpaintings (1920x1080px): https://www.deviantart.com/sylviaritter/gallery/all
“It is highly disturbing that we still have to have to say this, but websites dealing with such sensitive topics should not track their users for marketing purposes. Your mental health is not and should never be for sale.”
I still think it is pretty inexcusable. A core bit of OS functionality should not be at the mercy of whether or not some backend service is up and running. The online piece(s) of it might go down, but the local search functionality should still work! There is no excuse for the whole search window to render as nothing more than a solid black rectangle.
According to a Slashdot article that I just read, the problems with Windows Search have been resolved, with no need for everyone to edit their registries.
The problem was, in fact, Bing. For reasons only known to Microsoft, the Windows Search functionality apparently uses the Bing backend – even for doing local searches. There was a service outage today, which caused the frustrating black screen to appear.
https://kevin.thecorams.net/posts/2020/02/windows-search-down-update/
Windows Search down for many
TL;DR: The issue is reportedly related to Bing, and the “fix” being suggested involves using RegEdit to disable Bing integration. Not for the faint of heart!
It's also pretty inexcusable . . .
https://kevin.thecorams.net/posts/2020/02/windows-search-down/
I really shouldn't laugh so much at someone else's misfortune or frustration. Still, as a 20+ year software developer, I have to wonder why anyone would have expected the plan to use a brand new “app” to count votes for the Iowa caucus to actually work out. It is never a good idea to make the first real-world use of a new application be something important and so publicly visible.
@aaronpk Very cool!
Linus Torvalds pulls WireGuard into the kernel source tree ❤️
https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/bd2463ac7d7ec51d432f23bf0e893fb371a908cd
@amolith@masto.nixnet.xyz Thank you for taking the time to explain. I obviously have a lot to learn about IPFS!
I think I was conflating it with Freenode a bit, as well as being all paranoid about how the Big Tech companies used "it's free!" to sneak in to start sucking up all of our private data. Which is quite obviously not something the Anytype folks are doing!
The cost is there, however. It is paid in privacy, in attention, in the bits and bytes of our data caps being nibbled away, in electricity, in time . . . .
It is time to start looking for better ways.
On the flip side, people have finite amounts of time and money. People want information, entertainment, etc. People are reluctant to pay for access to websites, especially since most people are paying for their Internet access in the first place.
Advertising fills in the gap, providing money to run the websites, pay for the content and the software . . . and apparently at little to no cost to relucant people unable or unwilling to pay monetarily.
https://kevin.thecorams.net/posts/2020/01/therein-lies-the-rub/
The tagline of https://www.theregister.co.uk/2020/01/29/browser_security_enigma/ reads:
Brave, Google, Microsoft, Mozilla gather together to talk web privacy… and why we all shouldn't get too much of it
Browser makers keep coming back to the need to please advertisers
And therein lies the rub.
Websites cost money to run. Content costs money to create. Software, such as web browsers, cost time and frequently money to create and maintain.
As the saying goes, “there ain't no such thing as a free lunch.”
One in a million is next Tuesday:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/blogs/larryosterman/one-in-a-million-is-next-tuesday
Great article on software projects in the real world: https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/the-hero-developer-who-knew-how-to-build-lego-bricks/