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The 0.1 cents tier is for "100-999 Terabytes", so I guess the minimum is 100 TB?


Also a nice informative video on bacteriophage from Kurzgesagt: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YI3tsmFsrOg


They already abide by the GDPR. There are exemptions on the GDPR for: national security; defence; public security; the prevention, investigation, detection or prosecution of criminal offences; etc.


Well, since his post didn't have that information, it would be nice for you to provide that info and spare fellow HNrs a visit to the site, instead of accusing the poster of being a marketing drone.


I could not find price information - looks like they are just collecting emails, but someone in this thread mentioned other courses are in the 50-80 USD ballpark.


Does this use Apache Guacamole or is it a custom-made software?


This indeed is mostly a wrapper around guac. But we did design a custom client protocol for speed.


Doesn't Guacamole Client's Apache License 2.0 require you to provide copyright notice / attribution for using it in this way? I don't see it anywhere here.


I think the Apache License 2.0 does not require any attribution or copyright notice, unless you redistribute the source code.

https://www.apache.org/foundation/license-faq.html#WhatDoesI...


From the license itself, it seems like you do need to include the license contents within the derivative work somewhere. Since "Derivative works" includes "Object" (compiled) projects, and 4a states:

> You must give any other recipients of the Work or Derivative Works a copy of this License

They're pretty clear on attribution being in the source only in 4c:

> You must retain, in the Source form of any Derivative Works that You distribute, all copyright, patent, trademark, and attribution notices from the Source form of the Work, excluding those notices that do not pertain to any part of the Derivative Works


OP here. So it’s okay to keep the license in source only right? Do I need to attribute on the site too?


According to the letter of the law probably. But I would suggest that it might be nice to credit the main Open Source project(s) on which your business is built, maybe in a 'Thanks to...' page.


Tom Lendacky works at AMD, so yes... :)


Actually, both their data center and their support team are located in Lithuania.

Time4VPS is essentially the international brand of the largest ISP in the country.

I was sceptical at first, but I have a VPS running there for a few months, serving 100k hits per day, with no technical problems from their side so far.

I just used their support once, but they responded in minutes.


The company you're talking about ("Interneto Vizija") isn't an ISP. They are, however, the largest .lt registrar (recently passed 100k domains) and the largest hosting provider (shared/VPS/dedi) in the country.


From the datasheet:

"Two serial ports: Many PCs do not have these legacy ports any longer, since they have been superseded and replaced by USB for most consumer applications, but they are still commonly used for applications such as industrial automation systems, scientific analysis, POS systems and other such fields of application."



"Max. 12 sessions Max. 2 SSH tunnels Max. 4 macros Max. 360 seconds for Tftp, Nfs and Cron"

Not open source and heavily limited. Unless you pay for Pro, it's pretty useless...


If you just have a handful of servers you can still get a lot done with the free edition, not useless at all by any stretch of the imagination. Paying a few quid a year to keep up with the updates is peanuts compared to the extra productivity we get from it.


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