@skematica Finding a good balance is key to enjoying life.

Being Friday, I plan to break my rules a bit and have some Pringles.

Fair point, and I can definitely see the benefit in a financial sense. It just boggles the mind that all these open-source projects can effectively rebrand themselves a bit and wander down the path of making what started as a solution for home users into a heavy-iron enterprise system. :/

I think you can "just" be registered in Norway in order to get the domain name, so at least that made it easier. Sort of.

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I'm going to be rolling with the third one, given the lack of evidence supporting the other two. ;D

Wow, every darn "home cloud solution" morphs into the next HUGE ENTERPRISE SOLUTION™ after a few versions. Stuff no normal person would dream of installing on any computer.

What ever happened to simplicity and focus in software? Just building something small that does a limited set of things really, really well.

Just checked if I could order one, but as you mentioned, it seems like they have limited the .no TLD to companies and people registered in Norway.

A shame, given the otherwise low price and how clever one could get with the domain name. :D

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I sometimes wonder what's wrong with people. Specially when they leave a plain-text URL on a web page, instead of making it a hyperlink.

Same as a .se from what I remember. (129SEK)

That's very modern, which is nice. The only problem is obtaining the plutonium…

Unless you have friends from Libya.

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Well… hypothetically speaking.

If one were to stumble across an industrial microwave oven, or possibly one used in a large kitchen, the microwave emitter could be removed and modified to send a concentrated beam at a specific point. Most electronics wouldn't appreciate such a maneuver. ?

Naturally, there is a slight fire risk.

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