Thank you for your service
Thank you for your service
Interesting, I’ve only ever used the ovpn files and they recently broke the same way you describe. Redownloaded them and it started working again with the same credentials.
I’m guessing they broke something servers idea and the client had a hard time refreshing its config
The Problem you describe applies to reddit also, however the solution on lemmy is in your question.
If a community gets scuttled on reddit, where are you going to go? How do you make the transition smooth enough that you’ll retain most of the community. You’re pretty up shit creek in this scenario.
On lemmy if the main community is scuttled, there are already 5 new communities set up, with the same UX/app/login creds. The members can transition easily and carry on being wonderfully niche.
Yes technically the owners of the instance “have all the control”, but it’s in the same way that a friend lending you their car “has all the control”. If they’re a dick or need it back you can just ask someone else. As opposed to reddit which is more like welfare, if the government decides to kick you off, you’re shit out of luck
Typical Linux things, I never had this problem on windows…
It never got to the detecting a printer was plugged in part kek
Why tf would we even allow men to wear pants, silly question
Wh is a unit of energy, Ah is a unit of electric charge, basically how many physical electrons passed by.
The voltage of a battery goes down gradually as it is discharged, so getting an accurate value for total energy dissipated is very complicated, as this varies greatly with the discharge profile and other physical factors like the age/health of the battery.
The one thing that stays constant is the amount of electric charge a battery can provide. If it’s old, the voltage of that charge will be lower and go down quicker, but it will be the same total charge.
I agree from a consumer point of view, joules would be a friendlier unit, however it is also a lot easier to game. Electric charge is a much more definite unit in an electrical engineering sense.
If any of what I said is confusing please ask me to clarify, I’m assuming a basic level of electronic literacy but it’s hard to know what knowledge I’m taking for granted as an ex electrical engineer.
“Man slashed with knife goes into surgery to be slashed further by smaller knives”
Does it taste anything like baja blast? I might give it a go