-
12 votes
-
Reddit launches /r/Layer, a "community canvas" sponsored by Adobe
25 votes -
ProtonMail and Huawei: A relationship made in privacy hell
13 votes -
Web scraping doesn’t violate anti-hacking law, appeals court rules
12 votes -
Clarifying ProtonMail and Huawei
32 votes -
Tildenet (Not related to tildes.net)
5 votes -
Kuo: Apple to debut Tile-like tracker next week, new iPhone design in 2020
7 votes -
The stakes are too high for Apple to spin the iPhone exploits
6 votes -
DMVs Are Selling Your Data to Private Investigators
11 votes -
The people who built Etsy dreamed of remaking commerce with their bare hands. Fifteen years later, its sellers are being asked to compete with Amazon.
11 votes -
Facebook is under investigation for antitrust violations by a coalition of the attorneys general of 8 states and DC, led by New York Attorney General Letitia James
10 votes -
Apple Change Causes Scramble Among Private Messaging App Makers
7 votes -
Our past on the internet is disappearing before we can make it history
12 votes -
Jeremy Renner’s app is shutting down because of trolls
13 votes -
"Satori" Internet-of-Things botnet operator Kenneth Currin Schuchman pleads guilty
5 votes -
Google and YouTube will pay record $170 million for alleged violations of US children’s privacy law
6 votes -
Brave uncovers Google’s GDPR workaround
13 votes -
US Senator says Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg should face ‘possibility of a prison term’
14 votes -
Android 10 has been released
13 votes -
Burnout symptoms in tech
7 votes -
AMD announces BIOS fix for Ryzen 3000 boost clocks, update comes September 10
7 votes -
Virtual Cards by Privacy
8 votes -
Communications and internet have been blacked out in Kashmir since August 4 - five people explain what it's like to live through
8 votes -
Firefox 69.0 released
22 votes -
Usage share of desktop internet browsers 1996–2019
20 votes -
Hong Kong protestors using Mesh messaging app China can't block: Usage up 3685%
23 votes -
Mozilla’s Manifest v3 FAQ
5 votes -
Advice for first home server?
Hello, I have a few questions. I didn't want to wast money so I wanna use what I have in terms of hardware, only the PSU and storage if needed. PC: CPU AMD 5 1600 RAM 16G SSD 125 GB for OS...
Hello,
I have a few questions. I didn't want to wast money so I wanna use what I have in terms of hardware, only the PSU and storage if needed.
PC:
- CPU AMD 5 1600
- RAM 16G
- SSD 125 GB for OS
Services I think of running:
- Node Tor middle relay
- Node Bitcoin
- Node XMR
- Gitea or Gitlab
- Maybe some service to host files or make a share for lan or a could service
- Maybe a TS Server or Minecraft
Questions:
- Do I have enough power to run all of this or I am being to greedy? I have raspberry(not pi 4) stopped at home doing nothing I could run some of this services on them if the computer can't handle everything.
- Should I virtualize? Can you explain me your response on this?
- I thinking of buying a good PSU since I am running this 24/7, should I invest in gold platinum or something like that?
- Should I have multiple disks if yes can you explain how much and for what.
This is will be my first server at home so I would like to hear tips if you think I am forgetting something.
Thanks in advance.
Edit: visualize > virtualize17 votes -
Less than ideal router strength, curious what my Tech Tilderinos would recommend
I just moved, and my new apartment is set up a little weird - gotta love old construction. As a result, the router has to be in the other end of the home from my PS4 which is my primary internet...
I just moved, and my new apartment is set up a little weird - gotta love old construction. As a result, the router has to be in the other end of the home from my PS4 which is my primary internet consumption device. The way I see it I have four options:
-
Hot spot from my cell phone - not ideal because I pay per gig of data and it's not fast enough for gaming
-
Run a really long Ethernet cord - possible but would be a little bit of a project. I looked into it a little and I'm curious if there is any appreciable difference between Cat 5, 6, 7, or 8 from a home user perspective. Also, what's a good resource for buying one, since Amazon is not really trustworthy anymore?
-
Use a WiFi booster - I don't really have any experience with these. Would it be as fast as using the router, and if I used an Ethernet cable to connect my PS4 to it would it still be limited to wifi speeds?
-
Get a stronger router - considering I technically rent my router from Verizon this is probably the most cost effective way to go in the long term, any suggestions for brands?
10 votes -
-
Less… Is More? Apple’s Inconsistent Ellipsis Icons Inspire User Confusion
8 votes -
Privacy Tools
19 votes -
Flawed algorithms are grading millions of students’ essays
13 votes -
Apple will give indie repair shops the tools to fix iPhones
7 votes -
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey's account was compromised, sent public tweets and retweets including racial slurs
17 votes -
Android Q is officially named Android 10
14 votes -
Why protests are becoming increasingly faceless
10 votes -
Google to pay up to $200M to settle FTC investigation into YouTube over violations of children's privacy laws
7 votes -
Teens are using Instagram to cast each other in fake Broadway shows
9 votes -
BangBros bought PornWikiLeaks.com—a website devoted to doxing and harassing porn performers—solely to shut it down and remove all information associated with it
26 votes -
Mozilla CEO Chris Beard will step down at the end of 2019
18 votes -
Urgent statement of Hong Kong Internet Service Providers Association on selective blocking of internet services
11 votes -
Standard for light-based wireless internet connectivity (LiFi) provides emerging alternative to cramped radio bands employed by WiFi and cellular
8 votes -
New research finds that user affiliations on Reddit can be used to predict which subreddits will turn so toxic they eventually get banned
30 votes -
The weird world in RGB
5 votes -
TV manufacturers unite to tackle the scourge of motion smoothing
9 votes -
Silicon Valley is building a Chinese-style social credit system
13 votes -
Comparing four site-uptime monitoring websites
4 votes -
I made my own thermostat using a Raspberry Pi
14 votes -
Swedish data protection agency has issued the country's first GDPR fine after a school was found improperly using facial recognition technology
7 votes -
In April 2018, Facebook promised to share data so academics could research impact on elections. They haven't done it, and the project's funders will pull out if it's not all available by Sept 30
9 votes