Bob Dylan, "Slow Train Coming"
Also, "It Takes a lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry"
He's got to have other train songs, too, none others occur to me at the moment.
"Chattanooga Choo-choo" was really big something like 100 years ago.
There are many more software companies in the world then those four, including very small ones. It is still possible to make a reasonable living as such a small software company, though a lot harder than it used to be.
I suffer the indignity of having to open the shower door and reach out to the counter for a sip. I suppose I could do that for a reuben too, but that seems like a bridge too far.
Depending what you find acceptable there are things you can do. For example at work we proxy through a mailgun account to do simple smtp notifications from bash scripts and webapps.I would imagine you could also proxy from an email server.
And you can at least manage your own email domain accounts via various webhosts. This may not meet your criteria for self hosted but its more independent then using gmail.
Now ribs I can see! They aren't in danger of getting soggy, and you could string them on a cord and hang them around your neck like a merger of caveman fashion and an adult version of the candy necklace.
Building a religious site on top of an existing religious site to supplant that god or religion with another is a common strategy all throughout history all over the world, there is nothing particular to Europe or Christianity about it.
Its funny how a few people have interpreted 'belief' here as in a value, like "I believe in free speech." I assume it was meant to "thing I think is factually true" because "without any foundation" makes more sense there.
I know there are gaming-centric distros but I wonder, if someone built a Linux that was essentially a console equivalent, useless for anything else, how it would fare.
This is tangential, but their page behaves weirdly on my browser (using ironfox on grapheme). Bits of the page show up for an instant then disappear when I scroll.
Maybe when they realize 'bad' isn't a strong enough word.