@prologic let me give you my very personal advice, using the Queenâs language: stay away from all cryptocurrency shit. đ¤Ł
@darren@twtxt.net The few always spoil it for the many đ˘
I agree with your sentiment đ
@prologic@twtxt.net XMR has all but replaced Bitcoin on the dark web.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Itâs very useful. I always start my music player in a tmux session so I can SSH in, attach it, and control the music from another computer. Itâs also handy for letting long-running tasks on a remote machine continue in the background even if the SSH connection is broken.
@prologic@twtxt.net Monero has stayed a little more stable than Bitcoin but itâs still a cryptocurrency and itâs still going to fluctuate quite a bit. It also uses proof-of-work algorithm so it still consumes quite a bit of electricity. I think the value of being able to send any amount of money, any time of the day, to anyone on the planet in 20 minutes (appears in 2 minutes, spendable in 20) completely privately with near-zero transaction fees exceeds the drawbacks.
Unfortunately, the characteristics that make it useful as a global currency for day-to-day transactions also make it useful for people doing illicit things. Many exchanges, fearing regulatory action, wonât accept Monero for the same reason they wonât accept Bitcoin from a mixer.
Monero shouldnât be banned just because people use it for bad things. Itâs just a tool and it can be used for good or evil. Itâs the same reason countries use when they ban or restrict Tor usage.
@prologic@twtxt.net Iâm in if you accept XMR
Hmmmm
Monero, a privacy-focused cryptocurrency, is not illegal globally but is banned in some countries due to its potential use in illicit activities. Countries like Dubai, Japan, South Korea, and Australia have either banned or recommended a ban on privacy coins like Monero.23 Oct 2023
Thatâs not good đ
If I try and get a PoC up and running thatâs useful enough, any takers? I mean câmon itâll only cost you $0.15-$0.20 đ¤Ł
Interesting. Good to see Iâll have competition đ
@mckinley@twtxt.net And what about some of the other aspects that make Bitcoin awful. Like the stupid instability of itâs fiat conversation price and the stupid amouns of energy it consumes? How does Monero compare?
vmm
, it's booting but interrupts don't work.
Also, not sure about those lost RAM.
vmm
, it's booting but interrupts don't work.
Serial console doesnât work tho.
vmm
, it's booting but interrupts don't work.
And it booted
I can drawterm and all.
Iâm tinkering with the Plan 9 9k kernel https://github.com/0intro/plan9-contrib/tree/main/sys/src/9k testing if I can boot it on OpenBSD vmm
, itâs booting but interrupts donât work.
Actually, kyun.host might offer container hosting at some point.
On-demand Linux containers.
Run almost anything, without having to touch the command line.
Coming Soon
@prologic@twtxt.net That sounds great. The only other container-level hosting service Iâve heard of is PikaPods which seems much more managed than cas.run would be. It has customizable tier-based pricing and the minimum specs are Âź of a CPU core, 256 MB of memory, and âabout 100 MBâ of storage for $1/mo which seems awfully steep compared to a low-cost VPS. I donât know if PikaPods offers an IPv4 reverse proxy or not.
Monero uses cryptography to make transactions anonymous and the coins completely fungible. With most cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, the transactions associated with an address are public and you can trace those coins all the way back to their origin. This means that not all coins are the same. For example, some exchanges wonât accept Bitcoin that comes from a mixer because they assume youâre doing something untoward.
With Monero, itâs not possible to trace any transactions with just an address. People canât see what youâre spending your money on or where your coins came from. Transaction fees using Monero are also very small. Itâs less than the equivalent of 1 cent in USD.
Minuscule transaction fees and anonymity make it the best choice in my opinion for buying goods and services online. Monero is much more like âdigital cashâ than Bitcoin, which I think is better described as âdigital goldâ.
Ahy is Monaro/XMR considered good / better btw? đ¤
@mckinley Looks like XMR is much more stable than bloody BTC which is nice đ¤Ł
@mckinley@twtxt.net I was mostly only thinking about use-based. Is there a desire for than this?
@mckinley Will do! đ
@prologic@twtxt.net I might have mentioned this already but you might want to look into MoneroPay for payment processing when you get to that point with cas.run. Itâs a completely self-hosted backend service for receiving and tracking Monero payments and itâs written in Go.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de You could always keep it running in a detached tmux session and attach it when you see the spike. Processes that were recently using the netwotk stay in the list for 10 or 15 seconds after theyâre finished so you donât have to catch it in the act.
@prologic@twtxt.net $0.15 sounds great but you need to make money doing this. Is it still going to be use-based pricing or will there be tiers like conventional VPS providers?