That took a twist at the end
nickiam2
If you're getting protonmail anyway the bundle is worth it. You can use their client software or native wireguard. I personally use AirVPN, run by an activist group. Their website isn't shiny, but the VPN works great and has port forwarding which is really good for torrent connectivity.
I don't think with the Swiss privacy laws governing Proton you don't have to worry about them ratting to Comcast
GrayJay just came out into the testing phase. It not only supportsYouTubee but also Nebula, Odysee, Twitch, PeerTube and a few others with more to come. Works great so far. grayjay.app. Built by Futo, a nonprofit company which Louis Rossmann works for. His video here
You do know where that cash back is coming from, right? Everything you buy has credit card fees baked into the price. The business pays anywhere from 1-5% on every transaction to accept your payment, and a small percent of that is returned to you as "cash back" rewards. Its why I've switched back to using cash and any coins I get as change go into a jar. That earns much more than %10 "cash back", and some shops even make the customers pay the CC fee here in aus so I get a small "discount" too.
Where in the world do these things live? I've never seen anything like it before, and we have some pretty crazy things you can find in a house here in Aus
Wow, that can add up really quickly. I've been playing around with the free tier for a bit to try and fully understand everything before committing to the move.
I am aware of the per segment fee. I've got mostly large media files to backup and plan to bundle all the small files together into a tarball to reduce the segment counts.
It defaults to the highest quality available. Tidal gives you a flac file
DoubleDouble let's you download from all the major streaming platforms just by giving it a link to what you want downloaded
I hope this company remembers their roots and keeps trying to minimise costs for the end users. Since their IPO, they're expanding aggressively and built 2 new datacentres and are operating at a loss. Being a public company now they are beholden to share holders and will eventually seek to maximise profit.
Hardware virtualization is often disabled in the bios by default and probably just needs to be enabled. Called something like AMD-VT or INTEL-Vd
To be fair, the calculator on my phone has a built in currency converter and would need network access to get the exchange rates