Yet you're wasting silicone, energy and your time arguing on the internet, which is equally unimportant if not less so.
(At least some AI coded software is useful and saves some time and energy when it solves a real world problem. Whereas your ramblings only ragebait others to waste more time and energy replying to you without creating any real world value for anybody.)
It's easy to point fingers, but everybody has their own shitstain.
humanity is build on "stolen" labor in every one of it's aspects
from you being educated by other peoples knowledge without their explicit conscent, to you consuming calories that you stole from other living organisms
I think the part list is good as well, my build is pretty similar.
I think the PSU wattage is fine. They operate most efficiently when they are not near their output capacity. So in the long run you'll save more money by leaving enough headroom.
No, my wording was intentional. I was describing the journalist’s direction of inference, not asserting the definition in reverse. They saw the term “open source” and mentally reduced it to “the source code is viewable”, which is why I phrased it that way.
Open source does literally mean that.
It means that PLUS many more conditions. If you remove those additional conditions it's not open source anymore but "source available".
To be precise: open source implies source-available, but source-available does not imply open source.
This is fundamentally how Firebase etc. is meant to work: the client talks directly to the database, and security rules gate access. You don't need your own backend in between.
As for the spam issue, you're right that supabase can't do it (firebase can btw.)
During my research into portability, I kept thinking about how frictionless it is to play classic console games today. Pulling on that thread led me to projects designed explicitly for virtual machines, such as Another World which is equally easy to play today due to its targeting of a portable virtual machine, instead of any ever-changing physical hardware.
afaik correct me if im wrong but rust desk is not really the right tool for that. Rustdesk connects devices by connecting all the way through the internet to the rustdesk servers and then to the other device.
VNC or RDP are the right approaches here, cause you can use them to connect through the local network, never leaving your LAN/intranet. In addition to not needing a connection to the internet it should be more reliable that way.
If you use KDE then I think their krdc gui is pretty good. Otherwise Remmina.
I recommend "Software Architect's Handbook" by Joseph Ingeno as an intro/overview