

Unlike with free and open-source software, which are also often distributed free of charge, the source code for freeware is typically not made available.
It clearly says “typically”, which includes the software that does open source the code.
Unlike with free and open-source software, which are also often distributed free of charge, the source code for freeware is typically not made available.
It clearly says “typically”, which includes the software that does open source the code.
I’ve read the first part and it’s all “most often”, “may be”, so, technically, FOSS software is under the freeware umbrella.
Wow, thanks! I couldn’t find Andrea Bowman, it shows me some video about criminal cases! 😆
On another note, I received some flack last week for poking fun at the Immich devs for prioritizing the platform’s new mascot over a feature I’ve personally been looking forward to (yes, they were in on it). I had planned to make a formal apology this week until I noticed they dropped another release that again left me feeling neglected as they instead celebrated 60k GitHub stars (is that a lot?).
If you need me before next Friday, I’ll be busy making the transition back to Google Photos while enjoying this custom CSS for styling a Flame dashboard to look like the Lumon MDR terminals from Severance
Both these sentence feels very childish to me.
First of all, it’s an open source software, nobody can pretend anything!
Second, it’s clear that, as mentioned by one of the developer, they were joking about it
If he was joking too, I didn’t get it.
I use Alps bigger peaks for the hosts like:
(yes, mainly from Monte Rosa) and smaller peaks for the VMs:
If you host a system that uses the Google APIs, it seems to me that you don’t get any privacy gain since being you the only one using it, Google knows it’s you. I’ve been using startpage for a year now and I’ve been happy about it; I’ve never had to use Google anymore.
Be too, and I went back to the standalone community container
With Wireguard there’s really no reason.
Well, that’s kinda of a personal choice. If somebody needs to have services accessible by someone else besides him, that service can’t be behind a VPN (let’s face the truth: we know that we can’t ask all out relatives and friends to use a VPN).
I second your opinion about not selfhosting Bitwarden. About email, have a look at Proton mail. All the emails are encrypted in the server and are decripted client side with your password only when you open them.
What kind of attitude?
Typically it different than never. It means that sometimes the source code is made available and is the case of FOSS.>