It can possibly run Asahi Linux in the future. I had the same idea
It can possibly run Asahi Linux in the future. I had the same idea
They now built a bridge that allows drivers to avoid the border checks by staying in Croatia
Guard is 121.5 isn’t it?
Is this exclusive or inclusive of the energy tax? IIRC that’s about €0.15/kWh in the Netherlands
“🇮🇪”.reverse() = “🇨🇮”
https://social.overheid.nl/about is the official Dutch government mastodon server
I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s the country where the SIM originates. A prepaid eSIM from an EU carrier (as secondary sim) is pretty cheap though and might work if this is what they do.
AWS is very expensive. There are other compatible storage options, like Backblaze B2 and Wasabi, that are better for this use case
I think that if, in good faith, the person is unable to accept more CSAM due to the fact that their hard drive is full, there isn’t an issue. The intent of the law is that, it someone knows something is CSAM, they need to report it. I don’t think the government is going to come hard on Lemmy server owners unwittingly receiving CSAM through federation (though they certainly would want them to report and take down the CSAM on their servers)
Be careful with this though. I think I remember some jurisdictions require server owners not to delete CSAM and report it instead. Verify that you aren’t obligated to keep it before deleting it
There is MoltenVK for running Vulkan apps on macOS, and also Asahi Linux has a standards-compliant Vulkan implementation natively