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
Boost data only
Unreal roam in Canada and Mexico only
H2O pay for usage
Ultra is only $.02/MB for data; voice/text cost less with H2O
US Mobile "Global Pass", data only; do unlimited US plans do voice/text when abroad?
https://thesavvybackpacker.com/best-uk-esim/
a few under $30 from SIMoptions
data-only: https://cybernews.com/best-esim-providers/best-esim-for-europe/
Three UK: PAYG + data pack £10, eSIM requires contacting a human
https://www.three.co.uk/support/sim-support/esim
Lyca Mobile: £10/20GB, unlimited UK voice/text!
https://www.lycamobile.co.uk/en/bundles/sim-only-deals/#best-value
Physical SIM only:
Orange: €20/12GB, 30min/200SMS
https://travel.orange.com/en/buy-a-sim/offers/united-kingdom
Vodafone: €23/10GB
https://travel.vodafone.com
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
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.
Wikipedia | list of US MVNOs
https://www.whistleout.com/CellPhones/Guides/Best-cell-phone-plans
Red Pocket $20/5GB, all 3 networks available including locked phones, unlimited slow data
Tello: a la carte; $16/10GB w/hotspot & 100 min! Hard limit, one-time data packs available
H2O (ATT): $18/3GB (2GB hotspot), unlimited slow
PureTalk (ATT): $20/3GB (2GB hotspot)
Ultra (T-Mobile)
US Mobile $10/2GB light plan, $20/10GB, unlimited 2G data; 20% off for paying annually; also "Unlimited Flex" plan (annual only) with 5GB hotspot
Twigby (Verizon): $15/2GB
FreedomPop: $10/1GB, no more free plan
TextNow: free talk/text, various data "passes" available per hour/day/month; requires smartphone and app, with full Google Play Services and account
Hello Mobile: $10/1GB, $23/unlimited paid quarterly; hotspot only on $40 plan
Lyca Mobile (T-Mobile): $19/3GB, less during intro promo; probably no hotspot
AirVoice: $18/3GB w/o hotspot paid monthly, $14/2GB hotspot paid quarterly; promo pricing is confusing, hotspot plan might jump in price to renew
Ting: $20/2GB
Boost: $15/5GB, data shuts off after allotment
Boost Infinite is post-paid, but $25/month for unlimited BYOD; hotspot is another $10
Unreal: $15/5GB (1GB hotspot), unlimited slow
Naked Mobile: $35/10GB w/voice, $30/20GB data only
Kagi is an ad-free, premium search engine for people who value their time, attention and privacy. With results optimized to serve you and not the advertisers, Kagi is lightning fast and offers advanced features for customizing your search experience.
Also, Talkmobile is very competitive, on the Vodafone network. They allow tethering (hotspot). Uses a physical SIM, not sure if they ship to the US.
Great value for data while traveling. Requires eSIM compatible device.
Also inexpensive domestic service, with hotspot:
https://www.boostmobile.com/shop/buy/plans/
5GB/month only $15
They will only call the primary number and will not leave a voicemail, so if you don't answer, the cancellation will not happen; they will not contact you by email about it either.
Open-Source certified EHR
FHIR API
In the last few years, one of the “trending” topics that aim to contribute towards that goal, is the introduction of two new protocols: DNS over TLS and DNS over HTTPS.
This used to be branded NBRHD but that website is gone.
#GhostKitchens
Check which nearby restaurants deliver to you with this handy interactive map. Local Bicycle Food Delivery.