I have a cookbook (not a recipe book - there's a difference) from 50 years ago (with the latest edition being 2019) and it's amazing. No need to go for modern hipster recipes that don't teach you anything...
amju_wolf
Exactly because you'd be the exception there's almost zero chance you'd ever get to that point. Most people simply don't have a need to try to become even more wealthy after a certain point.
Like, when all your needs and wants are met, and you still have plenty of money to live that kind of life for the rest of your life, and your family also has enough for a comfortable life... Most people prefer to have less stress, they work less or not at all, or you venture into stuff that maybe makes less money (or none) and you do it for other reasons like altruism or just having fun.
To want to be worth billions takes a completely different character, one that craves as much wealth or power as possible.
And if it doesn't find sources it can just make shit up! ;D
This is the way. (At least for a server)
Are they legal in any EU jurisdictions? I'd hope not.
Not to mention half of their TOS being illegal/unenforceable in the first place.
The website generates a random value, your government signs a cert for that value. That's what makes it single use and zero trust.
The fucked up part is nowadays third parties like banks or sometimes even governments make apps rely on Google services, so you can't use an ungoogled phone for stuff you actually need for life...
It's a bailout where the taxpayers actually get something back.
How is it legal to bail out whole banks or other large companies and not get anything in return?
Sure I can use my bank's website (and it's a shit experience) but they still want me to have their own app for authentication... Don't even offer anything else at this point.
This might be an issue because f-droid re-signs apps with their own keys...
I mean depends on enforcement I guess.
Why exactly do we need signing authorities? Software isn't zero trust like websites. You do need to trust the developer - even a legitimate one. Signing apps with verified developer keys will only hurt small independent developers, open source projects and freedom enabling stuff like user patching.
It only works to solidify monopolies and doesn't protect you against shit.
Despite how similar the interface is the protocol is completely different. NVMe is basically just PCIe, so adaptating it so that it runs "under" SATA would be difficult if not almost impossible. And most definitely not worth the extra price.