Red Rozenglass
@rozenglass@fedi.dreamscape.link
a young man from a far away land.
corposlave ("software engineering consultant" lol).
GNU/Linux (Slackware). Programming (asm, C, sh, Lisp, Lua, Web, JS, etc.). Likes writing documentation, understanding & maintaining systems, archiving, organization. Interested in paper machines, books, visual novels, writing, drawing, anime. EN/AR fluent, TR can order food, JP early learnings.
RƎD.
corposlave ("software engineering consultant" lol).
GNU/Linux (Slackware). Programming (asm, C, sh, Lisp, Lua, Web, JS, etc.). Likes writing documentation, understanding & maintaining systems, archiving, organization. Interested in paper machines, books, visual novels, writing, drawing, anime. EN/AR fluent, TR can order food, JP early learnings.
RƎD.
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@rose@snac.pinkro.se @phnt@fluffytail.org I recommend against Proton Mail because they try to lock you in into their email service with anti-user dark-patterns. It's not just that you have to pay to use your favorite mail client, but you also have to pay to forward mail from your address to another. In other words, you cannot slowly transition to another service without losing mail that still goes to Proton! If you want to use another service, you will have to pay Proton a subscription /forever/ to keep getting forwarded mail. You cannot even download your old mail using POP3 without paying. They have some random utility they tell you to download and run on your machine which would download an export of your data. Extremely anti-user behavior. Even Microsoft and Google have the decency to allow you to setup a forwarding address and download your data using POP3 or even just as a zip archive. Ridiculous.