Fedora

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  • 10 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023





  • Domain name ~$15/year

    .com starts at $10.28/year

    Offshore server providers usually start around $30/server/month and quickly raise to thousands

    Proxy everything from cheap offshore servers to servers from legit hosting providers with fair pricing.

    Corporate application techs are usually $2k-200k/month depending on size

    Ops are a tech themselves, work with techs they split donations with or pay or nothing at all, or become a tech themselves as time goes on.

    Anything that requires a GPU would be a custom build, dell power edge is a powerful machine you can lookup retail for

    True, but a website like FitGirl Repacks needs no GPU.

    Storage Amazon s3 is $0.022 per GB/month

    Don’t use Amazon S3 if pricing is a concern.

    Keep in mind that providers [] often provide multiple releases codexes, resolutions and providing a lot more than people are requesting

    I’m not sure what to say about that? They sure can do that for images, but not for game repacks.

    You often have to pay for networking as well which scales exponentially

    Pirates don’t build on-prem data centers, they rent servers or services.

    Email accounts are usually $10/user/month any time would come from a senior developer ~120+k/year

    No, they can re-use whatever server they use for email. Why pay a senior developer ~120+k/year for email?

    But they are likely full stack developers so it might be closer to 200k in the US

    If a developer works with a pirate, they don’t get paid a wage. They’re part of the operation, and get paid depending on the donations or nothing at all.

    And servers to run development environments (double the costs above!!!)

    The development environment can be on the server or even on the dev’s laptop. They already paid for that, so $0.

    And infrastructure like Jenkins/monitoring which can scale high as well, but likely <$20k/year

    Put it on the server. Scalability isn’t practical for pirates to begin with. If they lay all eggs in one basket for maximum scalability and cost savings, then the cloud provider can end their entire operation.



  • Hard if not impossible to say. It depends on what they host. Hosting also gets real expensive if they make poor choices.

    If they choose to host their WordPress piracy website on WordPress.com, then that’s a shit idea. They’re overpriced as hell, even with an annual discount. 300 € annually is WordPress.com’s discounted price for a somewhat usable, but still restricted WordPress instance. Furthermore, pirates face the risk that hosting providers terminate their account and keep the money, so long billing periods are risky.

    They accept that risk to save some cash, and use WordPress.com. Okay, now what? WordPress.com terminates the account at the start of the new billing period and keeps the money. How sweet. Pay 300 € for the privilege of another restricted WordPress instance. Annual spending: 600 € for what could’ve been 21.12 € annually with a dumb simple Hetzner webspace.

    You may think that this is impossible, nobody is dumb enough to spend 600 € when a 21.12 € solution is good enough, right? Look no further than any company that lifts and shifts apps into the cloud that weren’t designed to run in the cloud. Expensive as hell for no fucking reason other than it’s in the cloud now. Or this poor fella who got a $ 30 gift card for saving their employer $ 500,000 with five clicks.



  • FedoratoLinux@lemmy.mlI Made Screen Brightness Control on Gnome Much Better
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    11 months ago
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    11 months ago
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    Thank you.

    I hate that most Linux brightness controls assume that humans perceive brightness linearly for some reason. I don’t want a flash bang in dark surroundings when I forget to use the slider. I don’t want to press my brightness up key a thousand times or resort to the slider in bright surroundings.

    So yes, please merge this.



  • FedoratoLinux@lemmy.mlA response to the "Boycott Wayland" article
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    11 months ago
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    But Wayland’s technical merits are relevant in a subtle way. Wayland is maintainable. Xorg isn’t. That’s it, the single most important technical merit. Everyone works on Wayland. Nobody works on Xorg. If people decide to use X11 today, their issues are wontfix with the solution to use Wayland instead. They can’t fix the issues themselves because X11 is an unmaintainable mess. Xorg is on life support with the only purpose to serve Xwayland.