Ace: aceofspadeshq at gee mail.com
Buck: buck.throckmorton at protonmail.com
CBD: cbd at cutjibnewsletter.com
joe mannix: mannix2024 at proton.me
MisHum: petmorons at gee mail.com
J.J. Sefton: sefton at cutjibnewsletter.com
Bandersnatch 2024
GnuBreed 2024
Captain Hate 2023
moon_over_vermont 2023
westminsterdogshow 2023
Ann Wilson(Empire1) 2022 Dave In Texas 2022
Jesse in D.C. 2022 OregonMuse 2022
redc1c4 2021
Tami 2021
Chavez the Hugo 2020
Ibguy 2020
Rickl 2019
Joffen 2014
AoSHQ Writers Group
A site for members of the Horde to post their stories seeking beta readers, editing help, brainstorming, and story ideas. Also to share links to potential publishing outlets, writing help sites, and videos posting tips to get published.
Contact OrangeEnt for info: maildrop62 at proton dot me
If you're thinking "I bet most of that is fake", then you're right - 87% of those sales are users buying their own NFTs to drive up the price.
In an effort to stabilise their marketplace and restore buyer confidence, LooksRare has implemented strict measures to... Who am I fooling? They haven't done squat.
I'm running a bare-metal cloud server here in Sydney for development until I finish rebuilding my lab (still have boxes everywhere) and it's great. Unlike a typical cloud server, you get an entire physical server, sitting in a rack, reserved entirely for you. And unlike a typical dedicated server, you have a dashboard where your could spin up a new server for an hour, a day, a week, a year, whatever you need, have it online in a minute or so, and shut it down when you're done.
PhoenixNAP's pricing is very close to what I'm paying here in Sydney - a six core server with 64GB RAM and 1TB NVMe storage is $105 per month, though the one I have here has 800GB mirrored instead, and the PhoenixNAP server has dual 10Gb Ethernet rather than 1Gb.
It's about a quarter the price of Amazon while retaining the pay-by-the-hour flexibility. You don't get all of Amazon's add-on services, but you should run a mile from Amazon's add-on services if you possibly can; they serve purely to lock you into that platform and Amazon has proven it cannot be trusted.
The biggest difference though is bandwidth pricing. Bandwidth on all the big clouds is highway robbery - $90 per terabyte at Amazon and IBM, and something similar at Google and Microsoft.
With PhoenixNAP, $90 will buy you fifty terabytes of bandwidth with a few bucks left over for coffee.
RAM is plentiful too. Except for a couple of budget models, you get 64GB, 128GB, or more. The only problem is storage. The reasonably priced options have only 1TB or 2TB of storage, which is not really a lot. My laptops have 5TB.
They do offer their own S3-compatible cloud storage at $23 per TB per month - including 30TB of free bandwidth, which would cost $2700 at Amazon. So if you're storing a lot of image or video files, it could take that load off your servers.
I really like having a dashboard where I can just go clicky-clicky and provision new servers. I really hate cloud pricing - and the general behaviour of Big Tech. So for me this platform is something that bears looking into.
A new type of parasite is taking advantage of remote work and remote hiring, having a qualified candidate show for the interview and then an alien bug in a skin suit turn up for the job.
In this case there's a happy ending involving a jumbo-sized can of Raid, but in some corporations this is likely going undetected.
Party Like It's 1980-ish Video of the Day
Disclaimer: You've got Bette Davis eyes? Ew. Put those back.