Also don't underestimate the fact that OP has a new phone and is trying stuff out. The screen is usually one of the biggest power drainers in phones, so it could be that it just isn't a fair comparison. I wouldn't be surprised if the phone is just unlocked and awake more in the first few weeks compared to a phone you've been used to.
Keep in mind that in some tld's (like .nl) the whois data actually dictates who is the legal owner of the domain. If you get into an argument with your registrar, and the whois data shows their name, you can't take action to move it or reclaim it without their approval.
Also if you let it expire, for the cool off period, only the original owner can reactivate it, that means you can't reactivate it through another registrar. Maybe your current registrar allows it, bit that's a maybe.
I'm going to assume you're in a country where they have the self checkout things which have a 'bagging area' of some sort wit a scale under it?
In the Netherlands we have selfcheckout without this weighing. You walk into the store, grab a handscanner, and as you walk through the store you can pick something up, scan it, put it in your own bag and continue. When you get yo the register, you scan some barcode on the screen of the register woth your scanner, touch your nfc bank card to the terminal, and walk out. No need to take anything out of your bag.
Sometimes they do random checks, then some employee comes over and scans a few items from your bag. But you can just let it be their problem. They'll usually put the stuff they've taken out back in again aswell.
Personally I've been very happy with time4vps dot eu. I've used it for a few years untill I finally started using my own hardware. Their support is (was) super quick and helpfull and just generally friendly. At the time they were quite cheap as well.
Thank you for taking the time to clear that up! Much appreciated!
Nice, great step! Just in case: did you check if you have any forgotten "log in with facebook" linked applications? You might want to check them to see if you have configured an alternative login. If you're not sure, I very strongly advise you to undo the delete while it is still possible, and go into settings to check for this. When you're sure you're all good, you can just delete the account again.
Thank you, that's actually the most clear answer i've come across. This gives me a follow up question, just to check if I understand correctly. Never trust the client asside, if an url blocked by canMatch, itwill not actually call the server then, right? Let's say I have a page /count, which if requested runs some code on the server that increments a counter. If /count is blocked by canMatch, it wont request the page, so the counter is not updated? While canActivate would actully request the page and update the counter. Is this right?

Installing Nvidia container toolkit with podman
Hi! I'm running deepseek-r1 in ollama via podman, but currently it all runs on cpu. From the podman docs I get that I should install the nvidia container toolkit to get this working on my gpu, however I'm not sure how to approach this. The docs talk about apt or dnf etc, byt as far as I know that doesnt apply to bazzite. Anyone have some experience with this?
Will this work if I install the container toolkit in a busybox, or should i then just install everything including docker/podman in busybox? Any insights are greatly appreciated!
How do they currently solve this problem for passwords? You could just have the register/create account button lead to a pubkey upload instead of a 'set password', no?
Then again, the guy giving you that remark usually doesn't know the difference

Help understanding canActivate vs canMatch guard
Im kind of new to Angular and I think I'm finally starting to understand the difference between canMatch and canActivate guards in terms of behavior, but I still struggle to understand which to use in which scenario.
Let's say I have an application with some component/page that requires a user to be logged in, and also have certain permissions. It seems to me that it doesn't really matter which one to use, right?
And yes, I understand that this is all client side and the actual backend endpoints need to do the same checks, I'm just wondering why you would use one over the other.
Any insights would be welcome.
Note: I'm using Angular 19.
I think unintentialy, but yes. They talk about spending. I don't know what you usually pay for your torrents, but I don't think it will change the number much.
Yeah, great times.. i kept using it as long as I could, at some point insta forced me to change my password every single time i opened it due to "suspicious activity", then they outright banned my account completely. Never looked back (to insta) since.
I'm kind of interested on this as well. I started using proton a few months ago when my ISP stopped supporting mailservers on consumer contracts.
Should I find something else?
That might be the lense, it's easier to see if you compare the outside ceiling with the top of the elevator doorframe
So now you want you want to start cutting your grass using your seeder again?
For the first issue thats not realy true. To access the totp key you still need the actual device with the key, it's only now split over multiple devices. Like having multiple bank cards for the same account.
For the seccond issue: Thats a good point, I have not found a good solution for that either, unfortunately
I use vaultwarden (selfhosted bitwarden), which stores both passwords and OTP keys on my own server, which I backup regulary. This allows acces to my OTP keys from any device, as long as it's in my local network or connected to my VPN.
Must say I really like this solution. If one of my devices fail, I have a pretymuch seamless switch to any of my other devices, which are already configured anyways, since it's also my passwordmanager.
If the server fails, my phone, pc and laptop all still have the keys cached, so I can use those untill I've restored a backup.
Yes.. yes, you are right. Woops
No the richter scale is logarithmic. Adding one point actually multiplies the intensity by 10. (Well, roughly in this case, but it's a lot closer to 9 than to 80)
I think they mean the type of drone which flies over, drops some bombs/shoots something, and flies back. Or the type that flies over to provide intel