I don't see an embedded external feed plugin option.
RSS Lookup is a free, open-source tool that helps you search for RSS feeds on any URL
Free DNS service. Donations accepted. DNSSec enabled, unlike Afraid.org (as of 2024).
hostcay.com: e3.99 5GB storage, but includes 5 email addresses
webdock.io (Danish): dirt cheap VPS, but manageable with a a control panel
[inexpensive registrar and shared hosting; apparently owned by Namecheap]
Lots of TLDs, including:
.co
.coffee
Email hosting is cheap! Custom domain and catch-all is allowed on even the basic version
Price-competitive:
Porkbun
DynaDot
Overseas:
Fasthosts (UK)
Infomaniak
Joker
Dear XDA community, this my first own thread and guide so please be forbear with me:) And i hope i choose the right section:) As the topic in the thread...
Top contenders:
Mailfence - Belgian, e3.50/mo
Mailbox.org - German, e3/mo; e1/mo plan only allows custom domain for "team accounts" (more than one account? does the first one have to do the e3 plan?)
Posteo - German, no personal domains
Runbox - Norwegian, inexpensive
Soverin: Dutch, € 3.25/mo
Protonmail or Kolab - Swiss, a bit steep; Protonmail e4.00/mo paid annually
Infomaniak: e1.50/mo (..?)
Pobox: US-based, seems like only the expensive account is for custom domains
Msgsafe.io: defunct
Countermail: Swedish, ~$4/mo
Disroot: Dutch, free but requires donation to use custom domain
Spaceship may not be super-private, but it's economical and US-based
Porkbun: Oregon, $24/year but only 20 max addresses
Getting the syntax right is hard! And it's hiding under /usr/local/cyrus/sbin/
https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-software-2/cyrus-ipurge-not-working-317640-print/
Open online radio search and reference
AT&T’s network went down for many of its customers across the United States Thursday morning, leaving customers unable to place calls, text or access the internet. By late morning, the company said most of its network had been restored.
Brave's goal is to both be the best browser for protecting your privacy, and the best browser for day-to-day, full-featured Web use. This post describes new privacy features being developed in Brave to better protect user privacy, without breaking privacy-respecting, user-serving websites.
Brave is rolling out a new feature called De-AMP, which allows Brave users to bypass Google-hosted AMP pages, and instead visit the content's publisher directly.