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What I was wondering after reading the article: How does Mulvad actually decouple banking data from the account ID? Or is it as simple as verify transaction once but never log?


I think they remove the invoice after a month. You can also, send them cash in an envelope


So there's no subscription thing going on, you just manually pay invoices?

I once spent an entire year issuing chargebacks on AWS charges coming from god knows what AWS account. Most likely some client project I forgot about and didn't have the login to anymore, who knows. Makes me think about that - for a service where you can't login if you lose the credentials, how do you cancel a subscription? In my case I had to eventually just cancel the credit card and get a new number.


No subscription. It’s pay as you go. You top up $X and you get X months. That’s it. If your month expires, it expires. Just top off and you’re good to go.


You can pay with an envelope of cash, so they don't need your banking data to begin with.


Perhaps so, but that's damn difficult or very risky for all but a very select few.


Because you can't mail cash? Or it won't be delivered without a return address


A short(ish) review of how things are going for Facebook now Meta, 10 years after the VR / AR shift announcement.

The 2015 statement can be found here:

https://www.scribd.com/document/399594551/2015-06-22-MARK-S-...


It wouldn’t be the first time they built a mathematical and physical model of the Isar River in Munich’s inner city, of which the Eisbach is a part.

https://iprpraha.cz/uploads/assets/dokumenty/sharing_experie...


I'm just here to let the internet know, if you struggle to setup Citrix on (Arch) Linux, this seems to work out of the box


Since it’s kind of related, here’s my anecdote/data point on the bit rot topic: I did a 'btrfs scrub' (checksum) on my two 8 TB Samsung 870 QVO drives. One of them has been always on (10k hours), while the other hasn’t been powered on a single time in 9 months and once in 16 months.

No issues were found on either of them.


How much have been written to each of them across their lifetime?


very little, about 25 TB written on the always-on one. The offline one just does diffs, so probably <12 TB. Both are kind of data dumps, which is outside their designed use case. That's why I included data integrity checks in my backup script before the actual rsync backup runs. But again no issues so far


if only i could trust btrfs scrub


What can’t you? I’m curious, as I somewhat rely on it.


>The term Web3 was originally coined by Etherium ...

Sure, mistakes happen, but it's hard to take an article seriously when such fundamentals are messed up 8 words into the article...


  The term "web3" was coined in 2014 by Ethereum co-founder Gavin Wood, and the idea gained interest in 2021 from cryptocurrency enthusiasts, large technology companies, and venture capital firms.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web3


I also responded this way until I realized this original comment was talking about the misspelling of Ethereum as Etherium.


i don't get it. is the fact that somebody misspelled a recently-coined nonsense-word product name/trademark an indication that the broader points are invalid?


Tangentially relevant: https://www.web3isgoinggreat.com/


so much japing, so little substance and to make a point LETS JUST SWITCH TO CAPS and round it off with a reddit comment - this is capitalism baby!

Also, what is this headline even about? Why the bashing on fintech? I worked for 4 fintechs and communicated with many more, not a single one was blockchain related.

Why is this even on hn?

If you want to read proper criticism of blockchain, read Molly White's essays instead

https://blog.mollywhite.net/blockchain/


Since the headline is about gaming distros: I'm on a quiet similar OS for like 2 years now, Garuda. Also tuned for performance/gaming, arch based, btrfs etc. Biggest differences will probably be the zen kernel, pre installed gaming utils like lutris, fan control etc. and a probably less performant but highly customized default style.

Its a curated version of Arch, releases drop in with a ~2w delay. It's brutally stable. As I said, I'm running the first installation for almost 2y now, doing my updates (everything comes with GUI support) daily to weekly and I faced one single hick up so far. I resolved it on the most user friendly way, picked the last snapshot during the boot (it automatically created before the update) and it acted like nothing ever happened. BTRFS with Timeshift works like magic for these rare edge cases.

I wonder how it compares to CachyOS, will definitely test it in a few weeks on my laptop


Location: Germany

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: No

Technologies: Java, Angular, vue.js, node.js, TypeScript, PostgreSQL Azure/AWS, DevOps, Linux (with an interest in: Solidity, Golang and Rust)

CV: https://docdro.id/NXEQW87

E-mail: (check CV or DM me)

Former SE Manager/CTO with a 10y foundation as a full-stack developer, particularly in the financial sector. Equally comfortable leading international/remote teams or diving into hands-on coding, I thrive in roles that demand both technical expertise and strategic oversight.


> Fig. No.5 Flow chart of repairing a flat tire

> Start: Are you a girl?

man, I was not prepared for that lol


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