The analogy did not connect with me because I am the Home Depot shopper who buys the 13-sensor stud finder, a second one for redundancy, and the third one because I eventually misplace the first.
Mirrors my shotgun approach to AI. Keep trying and stick with whatever works.
Since the author is using Windows, I'm surprised nobody has recommended Microsoft's Resilient File System (ReFS). It's kind of like Microsoft's answer to ZFS, but with support for clustered filesystems. Not a bad choice here if you're using the Microsoft stack: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/storage/ref...
Maybe the best use case for NetBSD is something you haven't tried yet? The kernel support for Lua seems awesome but that's not the same as running a full desktop environment.
i dont need a full desktop i need a modern browser and xterms running ssh to vps. netbsd apparently cant handle that out of the box. what does lua have to do with my described sys admin set up? why is it openbsd can ssh to a remote system and not corrupt the terminal but netbsd can't? why is it on amd64 in 2026 netbsd sees bkspace as ^H? who is the anachronism benefiting? why is it an app can crash x in netbsd but essentially never happens in my experience in openbsd? why are commands failing with no error? why do you need a search engine and a second machine or device to find the PKG_PATH to add binary packages on a new install?
This must integrate with Proton's appointment scheduling feature, no? That's a feature offered as part of their Workplace Standard and Workplace Premium plans. Does anyone have experience with that feature? How does it compare to the Microsoft Office 365 bookings feature? Honestly couldn't do my job without something like this manage my stacked schedule.
We at Sourcemeta (https://www.sourcemeta.com) are in the Proton business plan. The "Talk to an expert" and "Schedule Consultation" buttons in the main page point to my (the founder) calendar to book a slot.
No complains from it so far. People get it, book with success, and I run those calls on Proton Meet, which also proved to work pretty well.
Companies from countries with more than 40% global market share in a given sector could be required to form joint ventures with European partners and transfer technology. At least half of jobs in such projects would also need to go to EU workers.
China has criticised the measures as discriminatory...
Do EU companies face similar restrictions when doing business in China?
Mirrors my shotgun approach to AI. Keep trying and stick with whatever works.
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