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Because for some subscriptions the price goes up.

But the entire scheme here is to not have them continually. It's better to pay month+$2 in six months when you need it, than 6*month for the months you don't.

If you rotate subscriptions sensibly, they're much cheaper than the old cable model. If you're not looking, they can really bleed you out and be much more expensive than the old model.


You can also pay ~$20/month for an online locker that'll pull the torrent for you and serve to your devices, if that's within your philosophical tolerances. People need to get paid, but I do not much care of the enterprise value of media conglomerates and the resulting enshittification. I don't mind paying for Nebula.tv (~$36/year) and PBS Passport (~$60/year), for example, to directly support those media creators, as well as sending creators fiat directly or via Patreon (Coffeezilla and Peter Santenello, for example).

I have no problem with anyone just sending money if that's what they want to do; I have a number of Patreon supports also. I do strongly advocate for not letting subscriptions leak out without realizing it, and less strongly for considering whether or not you need something like Disney+ continuously or if you can rotate between it and other services.

I canceled a Disney Plus subscription recently (after ordering it largely to watch a specific show), because when I purchased their "ad-free" tier, I found that after paying they just replace their generic ads with their own in-house ads, which they then pretend are different from ads because they're "trailers".

Yet another example of a media company making the paid service a worse viewing experience. (For me, the money isn't the point. My time is limited. I'd happily pay more for the handful of things I have both time and desire to watch. But charging me extra for no ads, and then shoving stuff in my brain anyway, is simultaneously both petty and beyond the pale.)


Any good alternatives to Jira, locally hosted without a huge licence cost?

Leantime, Plane, Wekan come to mind.

Jira is absolutely huge, so it's hard to tell what parts of it you're interested in.



Bugzilla. Seriously.

Can be easily extended and unneeded fields can be disabled via template.

We use it since 20 years at a 6000 heads company and it's totally fine.


You can try Ekso:

https://ekso.app

Fully self-hosted, dockerized.

We made the pricing reasonable -- YMMV.


Honestly the best issue tracker I've used so far is Phabricator (now Phorge). It would be a bit weird to use it just for issues though, and tbh I'm not sure I would recommend it as a forge because it has approximately no CI support.

Redmine, maybe? With or without Redmine X.

This is unexpectedly one of the saddest comments I have ever read here.

The "everything needs to have a purpose and make money" mentality here is very exhausting.

Nobody knows. He was driving too fast to get his plate.


unsupervised FSD? Is that the same as FSD?


Hot swap batteries! Who's going to offer THAT first?


With that title I expected a photo.


You can outfit an entire apartment with AC for a thousand bucks?!


A window unit in each room can do it. They are unsightly and noisy, but they are cheap, easy to install, work, and the tenant can take them to the next apartment.


It's Brooklyn. It's one room.


2-3 window ACs.


I like https://www.borgbase.com

It's set it and forget.

You will need to set it up for them, then you get an email (from borgbackup, not the client so it works when the client is not running) when a backup hasn't happened for a while.

As client there are more options now (like Vorta, from them), but I have had success with https://github.com/garethgeorge/backrest and the Restic backend.


Why not just use an FTP server?


coz FTP is garbage protocol that should die 2 decades ago


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