I had a similar experience, i.e. strict keto for 9 months and fully came off meds with no signs of UC or asthma. UC came back after around 2 years and I don't remember how long before I had to start asthma meds again. I can no longer do keto though, each time I try I get palpitations now after around a week.
Yeah my asthma went into remission as well, though this was also a period of my life when I was very physically active and in the best shape of my life, so it's hard to say what was the cause there.
AmneziaVPN has censorship circumvention options and makes it easy to set up a self hosted instance of that's what you prefer, or use their hosted service.
Once upon a time, prior to Microsoft or eBay purchasing it, this is what Skype was. It required a set of central instances to be supernodes to facilitate discovery, then each client communicated with others directly. And IIRC any client up long enough and with sufficient compute and bandwidth, could become a supernode.
Skype and iChat both did direct client-to-client communication. Skype was bought by MS, and Apple got sued by a CIA front company over iChat. The result was the same both ways: all comms started getting routed through a central server that could log metadata.
Historically, source IP was a lot more readily available. Every IRC user's source IP was visible, every UNIX login session's source IP was visible, and lots of people hosted their own websites which meant they saw your IP address there too. The implications of it used to be more like having an email address from a specific university. Skype happened relatively early in the world of online privacy.
I don't understand why obsolete technologies by MS are often upvoted on HN and become the first replies, while the corresponding working, decentralized technologies go to the bottom. Matrix exists and has a preliminary P2P version [0,1]. Other messengers were also mentioned in the comments here. Another example of such tendency is here: [2].
Thanks for sharing. The navi looks to work nicely with the Docker and Git commands. I like their way of selecting the Docker container you want to connect to.
Yes, that’s the one I meant. One thing that annoyed me with Foreman is that sometimes it doesn’t terminate all processes when one of them crashes. Since I switched to Overmind/Hivemind I never had that problem again.
There's a good episode of Mindscape (Sean Carroll) with the authors of Curious Minds, Perry Zurn and Dani Bassett, which goes into depth about the busybody, dancer and hunter concepts.
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