They didn't say how fast it stopped rotating and whether the moon flew out of orbit awhile back.
I'm considering Zulip
https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/production/install.html
Do note, because it's using email, the recipient and sender are not private, along with the time, and probably the relative size of the messages.
The specific content of each message should be private as long as the encryption is done well. I haven't looked at it so I don't know if it implemnts safeguards to verify who you're messaging with (besides using the email address) and I don't know if it uses PFS (Perfect Forward Secrecy) to protect against a key getting compromised.
https://github.com/rsmsctr/vaultwardenGuide
It doesn't cover backups though. It uses Caddy instead of NGINX, and it uses DuckDNS to point a subdomain to your private IP address of your Vaultwarden server, so it will only be accessible in your LAN.
I've been researching zero-trust for my homelab recently and I'm considering OpenZiti instead of Cloudflare since I think it can all be self-hosted. The BrowZer from OpenZiti is especially interesting to me. The fact that I'm behind CGNAT is a hurdle though.
I would somewhat agree, except for things like tension or mysteries in movies which spoilers can ruin sometimes. It can remove unique experiences where you wouldn't know a characters motivations, or not know if a character will survive. They can also ruin some comedy setups where surprise is part of the humor.
Something that always bothered me about that episode.
Yeah, it seems Buddists are more focused on mindfulness and being fully in the moment, which is kind of the opposite of escapism. Also understanding duhkha, sometimes translated as unease due to "not having what one wants" or "having what one doesn't want" and accepting it and living with it rather than striving to eliminate duhkha.
...and of course Buddhists have been known to kill other Buddhists for being the wrong kind of Buddhists, so ymmv
Do note, though, that the parent company that owns Reddit also owns Ars Technica.
Then where does the energy to displace the air on the blue side of the portal coming from?