Yes, every resource that needs to be protected is represented by a "Service" that's implemented as a L7-aware identity-aware proxy in the Octelium Cluster, which is a distributed system that's running on top of a k8s cluster. Users simply access the protected resource/upstream through the Cluster, namely the Service, from a data-plane perspective, and the Service/identity-aware proxy does authentication/authorization/routing/visibility on a per-request basis. This upstream could be an internal resource directly accessible by the Cluster, or remotely behind NAT, or simply publicly protected SaaS resource (e.g. API protected by an access token, SaaS database protected by a password, etc.). You can read more about how Octelium works here https://octelium.com/docs/octelium/latest/overview/how-octel...
Msn.com
Office.com
Sharepoint.com
Hotmail.com
Etc, plus all the subdomains they insert before them. It makes it very easy to create phishing emails that look plausible.
Based on discussion on HN several days ago, I have started using Hashcards (markdown-based flash cards with FSRS; run from command line, but view cards in the browser). Once set up, it's pretty simple (e.g., no fiddly settings) which helps a lot. Getting new cards added is easy — especially with a Keyboard Maestro macro that I made (global keyboard shortcut pops up a window to enter Q/A and select a deck, i.e. md file, to append to; entering text only on the Q line creates a cloze-deletion card instead). Recommended.
My use case is drilling English --> target-language sentences, as well as law-related knowledge, miscellaneous facts, etc. Still mulling over what to do about other skills-based practices, à la Andy Matuschak's concept of "spaced everything".
If you're drilling English --> target-language sentences with spaced repetition, you might be interested in the free site I made to do just that.^[1] You can find the link in my bio. The source code is also on github.
Sentence practice is really the best way to do things imo. Studying vocabulary in isolation is so limited by comparison. So nice moves there.
^[1]: Actually, my thing does target-language to english drills, not the other way around.
"only for thing people would legitimately like to have."
Whilst that may be true for the most part, much of the art dealt nowadays is never displayed, just stored somewhere incredibly tax efficient until it's value has gone up enough to warrant selling.
In that respect I suspect it is much the same as bored apes. The price can go up while there are people with funds to put into things they don't care about. When the time comes that they have less money than the cost of things important to them, the 'value' can swiftly evaporate.
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