I had a roommate who was I guess self conscious of his poop smelling bad, so he bought these Yankee candle sprays…
And man, when I smell Macintosh apples now, I smell poop. Thanks, Dave.
I had a roommate who was I guess self conscious of his poop smelling bad, so he bought these Yankee candle sprays…
And man, when I smell Macintosh apples now, I smell poop. Thanks, Dave.


I have a .com for like $19.99 but pay to have my info redacted from whois stuff, an email address, all cones to like $42.99
I have a bullshit domain with some nonsense tld and domain name that I pay $0.99/yr for that’s on a vps I pay like $150/yr for all told (it’s doing stuff).
All told I keep it below $20/month.


I highly recommend it to anyone getting into self hosting, sysadmin stuff, cybersecurity, devops, etc.
It’s headaches, but once it’s working, you will have ridiculously valuable experience for any org.


I might be misunderstanding this concept but it seems like extra work, or a recipe for an insecure mess that could become difficult to maintain.
I run elk stack and log basically everything which has created a centralized point for observability. This lets me granularly investigate and thereby control the state of all of my networks services.
It’s a little ram hungry, but I’ve got some overhead.


When a huge company pulls out if a country due to its laws affecting their ability to make money, it should tell you that the company in question only has its status due to exploiting something that should be being regulated.
Depends where you work, I suppose.