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Indeed, it's a publicly documented feature: https://support.google.com/mail/answer/7436150?hl=en#:~:text....


I think down leveling is quite common, especially at higher levels as the expectations grow quite a bit between senior and staff. Depending on the position, actually filling it with +/-1 of the target level is a win. Interviewing is expensive and if a candidate is good for the role, but perhaps just a bit below the bar, then a recommendation to hire at L-1 tries to keep the candidate and give them a career path.

This is from my perspective at Google, I've never worked at Amazon.


Seems like there are quite a few options that show up pretty quickly when searching for multipath udp e.g: https://github.com/angt/glorytun

Would that work for you?


Posted a detailed explanation slightly above... Glorytun will not work to well with TCP b/c it doesn't provide separate congestion control for each path like MPTCP does.


I was a simple customer since before the BBVA acquisition, but once I heard that they were shutting down the main service I moved everything over to a cash reserve account in betterment, which I already had for investing. Since then I've opened an m1 finance account which had a 1% interest rate and 1% cash back if you use their debit card. (I tend to only use credit cards since the rewards are better)

Closed my account a few weeks ago. sad to see simple go, it was refreshingly easy and just worked, had great features and was something I never thought about since it just worked.


Generally RAM doesn't burn out, so I don't think that will be the reason.

My guess it will be around capacity, though if the LEO ISP market has multiple players all covering the same areas, there is a chance we don't fall into the market segmentation we have now since there will be multiple options.


DNS doesn't really redirect, but DNS is the answer. What you're talking about is split horizon, this is most common when you have an authoritative server for say a corporation, but can be applied here as well.

That said, I have a local dns server that is pi hole, I've set aliases in that that are preferred over my domains dns which would be used outside my network.

That way you can have pi hole pint to 192.168.0.0/24 and Google domains or whomever point to your vps.


Except, sometimes a data center goes down and no one notices. So if a data center goes down, and no user around notices, is it really down?


Yes.


For the most part, other services take care of network resources. Borg might have some host level network limits, but I haven't seen them used much.


I've asked that my number be unable to be changed to a different sim over the phone. So to change it I need to go into a physical store and present proper ID


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