Linus Torvalds' Backup Philosophy: 30 Years Proven
For nearly 30 years, Linus Torvalds has relied on a radical backup strategy: upload to the internet and hope others mirror it. An approach that has worked surprisingly well.
Read more âMy thoughts, experiences, and opinions
For nearly 30 years, Linus Torvalds has relied on a radical backup strategy: upload to the internet and hope others mirror it. An approach that has worked surprisingly well.
Read more âWhy humanoid robots are a completely idiotic design even for "general robotics" â a response to the usual arguments.
Read more âWhy the German pension system has been a Ponzi scheme since 1957 - and why continuing down this path is not an option.
Read more âOn the equality and equal value of people â and why the mania for equality has become the root of all evil.
Read more âA technical explanation of why camera drones work at high altitudes while rescue helicopters don't - it's about physics and rotor diameter.
Read more âWhy quantum computers don't mean the end of secure encryption and what solutions already exist.
Read more âA nuanced view on asbestos beyond blanket demonization - about physical properties, real dangers, and sensible handling.
Read more âOn the continuity of the struggle for freedom through millennia - from Aristotle through the Cypherpunks to today.
Read more âAn examination of hate as an evolutionarily important protective mechanism against creeping dangers.
Read more âWhy advocates of free markets don't need to hide behind "that wasn't real capitalism" - every step toward freedom counts.
Read more âWhy alcohol is more than just a drug and how it is deeply embedded in European cultures - about trust-building and social rules.
Read more âAn analysis of why leftist memes systematically fail â and it's not just about the famous "wall of text".
Read more âAbout the rhetorical significance of calling votes "elections" and what it says about freedom and democracy.
Read more âAn examination of patents from a libertarian natural rights perspective - why patents have nothing to do with free markets.
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