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Joined 5 months ago
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Cake day: February 14th, 2024

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  • This isn’t inherently bad.

    Some web pages are extraneous, fedundant, or only relevant for a limited period of time. A sign up page for a concert doesn’t need to exist permanently. Consolidating a large website down to fewer pages that are accessible for everyone is a good thing.

    Archiving services that retain web pages that deserve saving are how we should retain that history of the web, but the actual creators don’t necessarily need to indefinitely maintain a web page that becomes obsolete.

    Yes, a lot is lost that could have just continued to exist and archiving is good, but getting rid of clutter is not a bad thing.





  • You wrote:

    The fact that a CEO took time out to try and engage and discuss this users fears and concerns should be applauded.

    The context of the post was that the CEO contacted them and then kept contacting them after being told to stop. You are cheering on a CEO repeatedly contacting someone to tell them why their opinion was wrong. You are criticizing the person who was harassed by saying the person who harassed them should be applauded.

    You were victim blaming, and they even pointed it out kindly.




  • I have windows PC with 6 drives, mostly SSD and on HDD that I assume are all NTFS. Two of the drives are nvme(?) attached to the mobo, and I only have one mobo with nvme slots. I have a number of older boards that top out at SATA connections.

    If I install Linux Mint, can I format one nvme drive with whatever the current preferred linux formatting is, install Mint, and move the files from the other drives around as I format each one?

    Or do I need to move all the data I want to keep to SATA drives, put them in a different windows box, and then copy them over using a network connection?

    It’s been a while and I’m guessing my lack of finding an answer means linux still doesn’t work with NTFS enough to do what I’m thinking of.