Yup. I signed up to their unlimited a while ago, so I was happy to not notice this at all. 🙂👍
Instructor, author, developer. Creator of Beej’s Guides.
openpgp4fpr:CD99029AAD50ED6AD2023932A165F24CF846C3C8
Yup. I signed up to their unlimited a while ago, so I was happy to not notice this at all. 🙂👍
I can’t believe how much mileage I’ve gotten out of my 512GB SSDs on my laptops. And my “big” backup disks are hand me down 1TB HDs my friend didn’t need. I don’t do video, though.
People 100% aren’t going to pay to access every random website they want to visit. So what you’d end up with in a world without ads is only the big corporations being able to run a website.
I’m not so convinced. I run a website with zero ads or tracking and I’m not a big corporation.
I’ve been sticking with FF proper since it has the sync stuff that’s easily used. But it sounds like it’s about time to set up a sync server and run a FF fork.
I switched to in-person teaching a couple years ago and am glad I did. It’s been a challenging time as an instructor finding ways to make sure I’m added value.
Not that; I just write free books on how to write software.
Supporting on GitHub. Just a few bucks a month. It won’t take many of us to get to $175/mo.
I do pony up for other services (not YT Premium because I won’t give Google any money) and support a significant number of creators via Patreon, giving them more money by far than they’d ever see from me from ads. And I’ve spent thousands of hours on my own dime making written content and giving it away for nothing with no ads or tracking. So yes, I agree.
It should never be illegal to link to infringing content in the US. First Amendment should apply if they have any sense.
We need a competitor badly.
Reminds me of sdf.org.
We were there 6 days ago. Mostly fine except they couldn’t change the monitor at the gate to show the proper destination. I wonder if it was this!
I’m the same generation. My flowchart is: known contact, answer. Unknown contact, voicemail. Automatic VM transcriptions are great.
It should never be illegal to link to a thing. To host illegal content, sure, that should be illegal. But making it illegal to say where some thing, legal or not, is located is asking for all kinds of trouble.
I can’t find the link, but I read that some Canadian news organizations were using URL shorteners to post their own news to Facebook to get around the block.
But the sweaters!
And in politics, too!
“Sorry, Tennessee! And Oregon. And Minnesota. And Alabama. And…”
It does now–it didn’t in the past.
I remember it being a big space sink when I was editing video. Now all I have is DVD rips of my collection and those are nice and compact.