Sounds quite similar to Markov chains which made me think of this story:
https://thedailywtf.com/articles/the-automated-curse-generator
Still gets a snort out of me every time Markov chains are mentioned.
Sounds quite similar to Markov chains which made me think of this story:
https://thedailywtf.com/articles/the-automated-curse-generator
Still gets a snort out of me every time Markov chains are mentioned.
IF you already have an email domain you control.
Calling “acquiring and setting up an email domain and configuring the mail server for wildcards” “basically no extra effort” is a bit disingenuous compared to “solve a captcha for a Gmail account”
Yeah, inductive charging is basically a must.
Especially because it eliminates the guesswork if the watch is correctly seated to charge
No actual technical solution here, but it smells slightly of XY-Problems.
From what you described it seems the main issues are
Maybe you could look into solutions like setting a custom ringtone for important callers or having the phone announce caller names so your mother can decide if she wants to make the effort to get her phone.
I’m speculating a bit here but I can imagine that getting up and answering the phone is exhausting for your mother. Also if her mindset is " a ringing phone means it’s important" that could make it even more stressful.
Maybe you could find a way to let her silence all calls except caregivers and ICE contacts. (On Android DND exceptions could work for that)
That way she doesn’t feel pressured to answer the phone every time it rings and stays reachable.
If it’s actually just the physical issue of reaching the phone in time, does she have a convenient way to carry the phone indoors like a lanyard?
Hope some of this helps you
There should be an external hard drive full of portable game installs in some drawer that fits the time period.
Should easily kill a week.
That feature is right on the border between real neat tech and deeply unsettling.
“Hey, my phone uses its last few electrons to turn into a bluetooth beacon to stay findable” sounds like sci-fi “reserve power emergency mode”
“I can’t turn off the locator chip in a device that holds half my life and memories” is just dystopian.
I’m wondering if there would be a way to keep it useful while minimizing impact for people who stay off the grid. A hardware switch would probably be a good start but they won’t fly with current all-touch designs.
Ah, you “work” in “marketing”?
Wow, that sounds like a decent start for an architecture.
I’m tempted to spin up a few Jellyfin instances to see how it might work…
JellyFed(eration) would be awesome. It should use an anonymous overlay network so federation is not limited to people you trust in copyright-zealous jurisdictions.
That’s the equivalent of leaving the door open and hanging a sign “Internet over there” pointing at a wall.
Programs don’t need to respect those registry keys. If you’re worried about internet access, set up a firewall.
Also, if you’re worried about malware, the damage is probably done before anything connects to the internet.
B stands for Billion (Parameters) IIRC
Ironically Sync does, too, and zooms to full width on tap, hiding the Rick roll.
I’m hopeful that reencoding on the fly or even merging preencoded files into a single stream is too expensive because it needs a lot of compute power and invalidates caches .
IT changes usually affect management as well, while “cost saving” in production doesn’t.
Stopping AWS instances would be handy, but your idea to slag the drives is unnecessary.
Just set up full disk encryption for everything.
You die -> no key -> no data
I run a 2 node k3s cluster. There are a few small advantages over docker swarm, built-in network policies to lock down my VPN/Torrent pod being the main one.
Other than that writing kubernetes yaml files is a lot more verbose than docker-compose. Helm does make it bearable, though.
Due to real-life my migration to the cluster is real slow, but the goal is to move all my services over.
It’s not “better” than compose but I like it and it’s nice to have worked with it.
They should not be worried, they should be educated.
If you worry a new user enough they’ll go back to Windows or Apple because there’s less scary warnings there.
We need to make the transition as pain free as possible. Learning about the joys of kernel compilation and SELinux can come later.
The first step is "Hey, this is as usable as Windows, without stupid ads in the start menu.