if this post gets greater than or equal to four (4) interactions i will make a music in a random* yamaha soundchip
*not really random
@seabass @neil @Billie I wouldn’t touch Stalwart with a 3-metre pole since they started violating the AGPL:
First, there was a “rug pull” relicense 3 months ago moving from AGPL to mixed licensing with some code now non-free. This relicensing contravenes the terms of the CLA that the project signed with contributors (the FLA 2.0, equivalent to this one). The terms of the CLA allow any contributor to terminate the agreement if there is a breach, meaning that there is an ongoing threat to Stalwart’s rights to distribute the project - and therefore ours as well, so long as we ship non-free code, even if they change their license agreement to allow it.
I use OpenSMTPd and Dovecot. OpenSMTPd is simpler to configure than Postfix, but Dovecot annoyingly changed their configuration format (such that I’d have to redo the configuration) which is why I’m still on Debian oldstable.
this is so cool!! Taking photos with atypical spectra is a lot of fun, even with the rather old and bulky camera. The imaging technique used here emulates old Kodak Aerochrome film stock. It’s not available anymore, but used to be a colour IR film, which mapped the IR on the blue channel, while remapping red and green to get this pink-foliage look. I do the same here! Blue is solely IR and swapped with the red channel in post. #photography
Being able to unlock the bootloader of a device you own should be legally mandated. I own the hardware, I should own the functionality of it too. I can get the modem being illegal to modify, since that has a ton of regulatory and public safety tape around it, but the OS being irreplacible is dumb.
Also, unlocking the bootloader should be as simple as sending a command to the device. Screw this trend of needing unlock codes (looking at you Motorola, Fairphone, and Co.).
Boost this if you think DENIC should just hand out free hosts files in the meantime