Yeah, Discord is not a privacy preserving service in the slightest. Honestly I’m only using it because of the network effect at this point.
Yeah, Discord is not a privacy preserving service in the slightest. Honestly I’m only using it because of the network effect at this point.
What a novel and interesting idea! If only it wasn’t all a huge scam to take money from investors!
Do you have a source for that? I am unaware of any modern hard drives that support reading individual bits; the minimum unit of data that can be read is generally one sector, or 512 bytes. If the sector fails to be read, the drive will usually attempt to read it several times before giving up and reporting a read error to the PC.
Data recovery companies can remove the platters from a damaged drive and put them in a working drive, as long as the platters are in good condition, preventing further damage. (If the platters themselves are damaged, you’re screwed either way).
If your data is really important, you should send it to a reputable data recovery service. Using the drive any more (even with a tool like SpinRite) risks further damage.
The kinetic energy of an object is equal to the energy that was required to accelerate it.
They work out to the same total amount of energy.
About 132 kcal, if your calorie to chicken heat transfer is 100% efficient.
“But I saw it on TV!” says the man currently saying untrue things on TV.
Well, it got the job done, did it not?
If every one of those users uploads one 10MB file, that would be two petabytes of data. At S3’s IA prices that’s $25k/month. And people are uploading far, far more data than that.
If anyone wants to actually run this, here ya go:
#include <stdio.h>
short i=0;long b[]={1712,6400
,3668,14961,00116, 13172,10368,41600,
12764,9443,112,12544,15092,11219,116,8576,8832
,12764,9461,99,10823,17,15092,11219,99,6103,14915,
69,1721,10190,12771,10065,16462,13172,10368,11776,
14545,10460,10063,99,12544,14434,16401,16000,8654,
12764,13680,10848,9204,113,10441,14306,9344,12404,
32869,42996,12288,141129,12672,11234,87,10086,
12655,99,22487,14434,79,10083,12750,10368,
10086,14929,79,10868,14464,12357};long
n=9147811012615426336;long main(){
if(i<0230)printf("%c",(char)((
0100&b[i++>>1]>>(i--&0x1)*
007)+((n>>(b[i>>001]>>
7*(0b1&01-i++)))&1
*main(111))));
return 69-
0b0110
;}
Bonus points if you can deobfuscate it!
After reading the first few paragraphs, I can understand why that site was deprecated by Wikipedia as a source. It’s a very opinionated article.
They do still have to cater to desktop users, so I imagine accessible websites for those platforms will exist for many years to come.
Space kites are the best kind of kite!
Still, hosting costs were the reason for discussing legal liability. Such a server also increases centralization which isn’t ideal.
It’s all a giant conspiracy!!!
I feel personally responsible for this post.
That doesn’t solve the cost problem. Now all the traffic is going through that intermediate server, and someone has to pay for that.
Really good book, one of my favorites.