const statement = specificStatement ?? nonSpecificStatement ?? someStatement ?? unrelatedStatement ?? ‘idk’;
I try things on the internet.
rarely, shit just works.
const statement = specificStatement ?? nonSpecificStatement ?? someStatement ?? unrelatedStatement ?? ‘idk’;
Step 1. Freak the fuck out.
I love not having features!
Sorry, shitposting is a hard habit to break. These are the first two legit definitions I found when googling. I guess I keep forgetting that W stands for Windows and that sysadmins still administer windows machines, and that windows has server products. You see, after NT, I went to linux and forgot about the windows world with the exception that I need the computer for games.
I am not very familiar with the West Salem Foursquare Church or the Washington State Fusion Center. Could you be more specific?
Can you fish an antenna outside your window, and have a few hundred dollars to spare? You might get better signal with a booster. I use one from surecall on my car and it fills in the gaps in coverage well. Not sure if I get 5g or not, but I get adequate cell service. I think they have ones for the home, ideally with a directional antenna and mast. At that point, you should have great 5g, but your mileage may vary.
maybe then you want to try manually falling back to LTE. from the docs:
LTE: This setting should only be selected if experiencing service issues in locations that offer multiple network types and only LTE is needed.
the phone does it when you set it to automatic. but you haven’t set it to automatic, so it sees 4g and 3g and says “nope, my user would rather have no service than 4g or 3g service”.
you may want to get a UPS for your modem and wifi. a nice 1000watt UPS should give you a few hours of internet when the power goes out.
The phone is trying this on it’s own but you are preferring not to use it, instead preferring 5g networks.
Honestly you should probably just let the phone do its thing. Various bands have various capabilities. 5g is very fast, goes through concrete but doesn’t travel far (even via air). LTE has more bands in lower frequencies than 5G does IIRC, and lower bands travel greater distances and serve more customers. Phones automatically try to use the 5g signal, falling back on 4g, then 3g, 2g… the reason the feature you enabled exists is when there are stronger 4g signals that are getting picked up and there is still a 5g signal within range. In your case I doubt the 5g signal is in range.
Btw, your pixel should be using wifi calling at home, which uses the internet and gets as good of a signal as your home wifi does.
Signed by whom? The CA.
The CA is the certificate authority.
You can create your own CA and sign your own certs for free, but people would need to have your CA root cert in their browser for them to be able to trust your signed certs.
Let’s Encrypt is a real CA bundled with browsers, and it signs free cert signing requests when specific criteria is met. This is done because TLS is an important privacy mechanism that works best if many certs are in use and not just a few wildcard certs.
Why not trust self-signed certs? Because there are no checks. When miicrosoft.com (the people who make the miis on your wii) gets a free cert signing from Let’s Encrypt, its because the owner of miicrosoft.com proved that they owned the domain miicrosoft.com by means of a lets encrypt / acme challenge. When you create your own CA and sign your own certs you are beholden to your own rules. You could sign a free cert for microsoft.com (the people who make minecraft) but then you would also need to convince users to install your CA, and then you can steal their blocks and grief their builds.
My point still stands.
Not all of them are! I could contribute to the code base right now and I don’t have an instance.
1 contributor’s opinion and the existence of one community does not an argument make.
the devs don’t care about laws, if you want to put it so broadly, because the devs aren’t the ones who would get in trouble here, anyway. instance owners would likely catch the most trouble, especially because you can also add your own gdpr compliance if you want to.
also most devs aren’t facebook. most devs don’t really care too much about tracking users. the commercial sector on the other hand…
I’m sorry, but I think we’ve fallen victim to Poe’s Law here. Fret not, I understand the concept well, I was just cosplaying as someone who did not, laregly out of frustration for mankind’s dependency on centralized services.
But then how will I know which instance is the real one and not the impostor? What if I join an itailian instance, will I be the impasta?
I don’t even know man this shit is so confusing. I used to just comment and upvote when I saw shit I liked but now how will I know if the shit I liked came from one server or another. This is just madness we can’t keep treating people this way!
And you know the first thing devs do when they start writing code? They look up laws drafted by non technical people to ensure they are fully in compliance. The priority of lemmy all this time has been GDPR compliance, the fact that the app looks and functions similar to reddit is an afterthought.
Can it run crysis?
Lemmy was created before GDPR.
Volunteers probably have not implemented GDPR and may not, or might.
Too bad you couldn’t copy it over with low-speed dubbing.