Similar enterprise-grade SSDs go for around $16K
Godort
They're currently trying to paint Carney as a pedophile because he met Ghislaine Maxwell at a social event one time.
"State sanctioned murder is fine if you were a victim of British colonialism 200 years ago" is a wild take, even for a tankie
That's one issue where they both agree. The conservatives want to be more like the US with lower taxes and fewer regulations, but they still want to be Canadian.
It's because their playbook has been the same populist "get the elite out of politics" nonsense that the GOP have been pushing since 2015.
Turns out that wanting to be like MAGA really backfired once they wanted to make an enemy out of Canada. We have plenty of fascists up here too, but even they still want to be Canadian.
I mean, this doesn't really change anything from a practical perspective. It just highlights that the verbage in the press release was alarmist.
It's still a security concern that most users will be unaware of.
You can get spinning rust all the way up to 32 TB in a single 3.5" disk and 8 TB in an NVMe drive. The tech is out there, but it takes time for the price of stuff like that to come down when there isnt much demand for it.
Mostly it's their attitude to controversy.
Brave has had several major issues over the past few years and they didn't reverse course until press got bad enough for them to make a statement and try for damage control. This includes:
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Replacing ads on websites with their own, and collecting that revenue
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Inserting their own referral codes into auto complete when users navigate to Binance
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Installing an extra VPN service on Windows machines without user consent
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Sending DNS requests to the local ISP when in TOR mode effectively removing protection against spying
On top of all that, it's based on Chromium, which means that Google is in control of their upstream source code.
Yeah, but then you have to use Brave
"We're not liberal or conservative, we're a secret third thing!(conservative)"
This sucks, but I can understand both sides here.
Canada has strangely high standards when it comes to food regulations. Especially in restaurants. And lowering those could result in an influx of low quality processed foods entering the market.
On the other hand, the reason it's failing to meet the standard is that it has added vitamin B which feels a bit absurd since those additions are allowed in other products here.
I hope this gets resolved in a way that lets this dude keep selling Vegemite at his shop.