I just wrote a YouTube scraper and exported to RSS and into my podcast client. Using YouTube any other way is masochism in comparison.
I just wrote a YouTube scraper and exported to RSS and into my podcast client. Using YouTube any other way is masochism in comparison.
Hope you’re joking, because this is not how any of this works.
I run syncthing with my own relay and I trust that setup. Owning me through syncthing would basically require backdooring the software, something that’d be likely to go noticed by the syncthing community.
Rustdesk is a backdoor by functionality and it’s already using infra I don’t control. I don’t feel comfortable using that.
It’s literally a third-party service that let’s others control your desktop. Doesn’t matter how FOSS the clients and end servers are, one also needs to trust the intermediate servers. If those running them are caught dishonest about which country they’re located, the trust evaporates. China or not.
Doesn’t work if it’s invisible.
Homoglyphs? Invisible text? Bidirectional text? Just highlight every line that goes beyond ASCII with yellow warning colors and require to vet it. Maybe make localization data an exception.
How much is this in Chinese plants?
Just leave for the nearest place that accepts scrap metal and wait.
It’s mutually beneficial for him and Putin.
Shoehorned. I’m sure you have your reasons to hate conservatism, and I have no intention to downplay or dismiss whatever opinion you hold on conservatism, but Russians are fatalistic conformists, not conservatists.
It’s interesting how you’ve shoehorned conservatism into the conversation, but “fatalism” is the right word here.
I’ve heard figures up to $30k, I think, but 1. reports on whether these are or are not paid out reliably don’t seem conclusive to me 2. I’d be very surprised if there wasn’t a regional coefficient, and these are Moscow numbers 3. wrestling them out of the system must be hard, and now there’s also $SUBJ.
I remember it used to be 1/13 of its metal value, but I can’t Google it up quickly and the ratio has probably changed since then anyway.
To put things into perspective, that’s ~4 months of median salary, or ~8 months of minimum wage.
Double-checked, and you’re right.
I’m sorry you fell victim to the powerful madman image Russia is so desperate to project, when (misguided) rational cowardrice is all it does.
They wrote “they were asked about [their views]… those who were moronic enough not to lie, were deported”, which reads as “not lied => deported” to me. Let’s break it down:
Pro-Kremlin, lied = no claims; not deported, I guess.
Pro-Kremlin, not lied = claims they are deported; understandable.
Pro-Ukrainian, lied = no claims; wtf tho.
Pro-Ukrainian, not lied = claims they are deported; that’d be stupid.
Am I clear enough now?
Sure, videocalling with one right now. That’s not what I’ve been discussing, I was highlighting the suboptimal wording that suggested there were none.
facepalm There are pro-Ukrainian ones there, lots of them.
Definitely not matrix.