I think for those that wanted Teslas, they realized they have to buy them before the tariff war gets too hot. So ironically there's a surge of purchases
Ideology aside, they make some very good cars, and I don't blame people for buying them
VPNs don't help here, the website asks you for your driver's license. Tbf giving your credit card to them is typically enough for them (big tech + govt) to construct a full profile of who you are anyway, and that was the original "age gate" -- though there are some services that make CCs modestly privacy preserving -- not the case for IDs
I've been lucky enough to find some women that are a lot of fun to be around, and understand my interests at a deep level. I'd describe it as kind of like friendship, but with a woman
Men become feral if left alone long enough. They identify with the mountains and the moss. They smoke their pipe tobacco while looking longingly along a river. They maintain weight for the winter. They become one with the universe. Then they become horny and the great cycle continues
Damn dawgs, Trump campaigned saying that he would fix this as a mere president-elect. This is my "wow holy shit" face, actually seeing it happen maybe :O
The similarities to Lemmy are substantial, it's just not on activitypub, but rather its own pubsub thing. If you want to host data, you still have to keep a node running at all times, it's not the case that "there are no instances". Those instances can moderate the content, so it's not the case that "there's no moderation." The whitepaper mentions that "its possible to delegate running a client to a centralized server..." rather than having to have a fat syncing client running on your own machine ... in lemmy, it's more like "its possible to run your own node if you want". Plebbit doesn't care about maintaining history of posts, it expects that servers will go down over time, and the data will be lost. Lemmy is pretty similar in that regard too, if all instances hosting the data go down, then it's lost. The expected outcome is that there's a handful of big nodes, as is the typical result of this form of "decentralization" - same as Lemmy, Email
Ultimately, I don't see Plebbit doing anything particularly smarter/better, and having private/public key cryptography involved doesn't really matter. They talk about blockchains and using coins as anti-spam mechanisms, but I don't see why that's relevant to the implementation
Honestly, I don't recommend it. It's a stressful lifestyle, you have to do a lot, and it's rare that you make more than just switching jobs. Seeking jobs, doing negotiations / signing contracts, and dealing with the kind of bosses that don't understand software well — are all really annoying. I've been a contractor for 5 years now, and I'm genuinely not sure what the good part of it is
Ok, so how to do it / get started. Imo you need a well known public project and speciality. Being the lead dev of a popular open source project is a good way. People will reach out to you for help integrating it, or making something similar, or adding features they need & will pay for. A specialty is something like being really good at WebRTC, financial regulations law, graphics drivers, crypto smart contracts, etc — with a proven record. You need a brand for yourself, and it needs to be way stronger than just a resume. You need to spend part of your time networking & job hunting, always
An important part is either getting paid very well, or taking ownership stake in the projects you build to roll the dice that way. Otherwise, you would be better off doing a job. Why? Because a contracting firm, which I had, isn't worth anything in a sale, aside from the talent it has. Compare this with something like a SAAS startup where the value is a multiple of revenue and user count. Having a flat value for just the employees isn't as valuable as a 10x multiplier on a steady business. It's volatile. I've heard construction contractors complain the same way, "I just take a salary to build a house someone else flips for double, I wish I owned my own house"
Honestly, software jobs are lucrative and easy. Contracting is stressful and complicated. The freedom isn't much different
There's like 1.2 million people in USA prisons. Why this group in particular?? Just do what every dem president does and release all the potheads without actually fixing the war on drugs problem
Imma wait to be excited about this, it's some kinda nonsense like gigantic atoms, with a hard candy shell made of bubbles but the energy of 10 suns idk man that's pretty out there
No cap that might actually keep without boiling your bottles, you have on your hands a tomato shrub XD