i've seen something like this before, where the kernel holds the file handle open for the process so that it thinks the file is still there. i think it's related to how the program closes the file but i don't remember the details. restarting qbittorent will most likely fix it.
lime
your reaction makes me more confident that this may turn into something interesting :)
i take it then that files must have some ownership information associated with them, to distinguish the author from a relay node? or is that just a private key.
i'm interested in the dynamic linking, what mechanism is used to stop situations like left-pad or the pypi incident where a file is removed replaced with a malicious alternative?
if I'm reading this right, it's a bit like ipfs+dht. is this a content-addressable system?
anyway, you should probably have demos of
- large files (like a Linux disk image), to demonstrate consistency in transfer.
- Video stream, to demonstrate performance and low latency.
- multiple files shared with many peers at once, to demonstrate scalability
- sharing with low bandwidth and high latency, to demonstrate possible mobile use cases.
thoughts:
- the logo is very close to wireguard's.
- if the data is stored on peers, that means there must always be people with free storage online for it to work? how much storage is needed? is that data in plaintext? could a bad actor push illegal content to peers without them knowing?
also, please convert the whitepaper to a format that is actually readable. rtf? really?
the amount of dust under that throne...
oh did Klaus retire?
there haven't been card fees for end users in Sweden for many years. handling cash is a lot more expensive since you need somewhere secure to keep change, you loose time at the till handling the money, and you need to pay for someone to come pick it up. the time gained from just having the customers pay with card means businesses gladly swallow the fees.
and yes, i'm always surprised when going abroad how much more analog everything is. the nordics and Baltic's are generally at about the same level (with Estonia way ahead), but the rest of the continent feels like it's 10 years behind. I was once asked if I really wanted to pay with card in a corner shop in Leipzig, since the card fee was €10.
not that i'm a fan of the digitalisation, it makes marginalised groups even more marginalised. i see my elderly relatives struggling with it often.
i got an interview as an embedded software engineer for a company that makes wireless camera flashes. high-precision real-time programming. i wanted to dive further into that area.
the first task was... reading comprehension, basic arithmetic, and pattern matching. i was flabbergasted. i wrote a really negative passage in their feedback form about how they apparently don't trust their engineering candidates to be able to read, and how those pattern matching iq tests are bullshit since you can up your score by like 20% if you practice.
they called me back and explained that the reason they have everyone from cleaning staff to C-level take the standardized test is to create a workplace of "objective equality". also they were really confused about my stance on the test because apparently i had scored in the top 5%. that's the fastest i've ever noped out of an interview process.
originally? a paid product. now? crypto!
jellyfin is a streaming server. get yourself a domain name and you can connect your apps to it from anywhere.
sure, do that. and good luck with this, i did something similar for a project once and as usual its those last 5% that are going to cost you 90% of the time.