It's missing some sort of per-minute / per-GB RAM "pay as you go" pricing model. It seems like Fly.io, but missing the pay-as-you-go pricing & rapid scaling model that makes Fly worth using.
You deploy using a Dockerfile, or Docker Compose.
Definitely suggest you give it a shot. The free plan is a no-brainer for the performance you get. We are on the team plan at https://www.sourcemeta.com
It kills me every time. I automatically lose any interest in the substance and often just throw away the whole conversation!
I myself already feel like my style is being influenced by all conversations I've had with LLM, if not influenced by their responses, at last influenced by how I talk to it.
Already happened, most of the internet pre-AI was just human-generated SEO-optimized slop created by underpaid content writers in third world countries. All those listicles, informaticals, etc, are now currently being used to train AI, but before that, they were what "trained" humans.
- Hetzner (Cloud, Box, and Object Storage)
- Brevo (for transactional emails)
- Mollie
For monitoring I use and recommend UpDown.io, which doesn’t seem to be listed there.
My only gripe with SIB was terribly low deliverability to Outlook, even with full config.
It doesn't seem very well known, but I've been a happy user. Most of the others have become over-bloated with a shitty UI.
> The Services are not designed for sending automated or transactional emails. It is a violation of these Terms to use the Services to send programmatically generated emails to addresses that are outside your Customer Account.
Think about it like coolify is to a VPS as Canine is to Kubernetes.
I found the section sorta funny, but I was actually trying to find reasons not to use it. Might want to add some real reasons in there :)
I wonder if anything changed WRT to user management in OVHCloud and how does it compare to other platforms.
Either way, one of the most critical parts is that many are still hosting on Google Cloud, AWS or Microsoft, therefore you are not 100% insulated from Cloud Act.
Are the ones that are tagged "EU hosted" among the ones you mean host on Google Cloud, AWS or Microsoft?
In their footer they say: Made and hosted in the EU which technically it's not wrong, but since they are using Google Cloud and Cloudflare, they are not insulated from the effect of the CLOUD Act.
Doesn't that just trade password resets for passkey resets? Or do they permanently lock out users who lose their passkey?
> Passkeys don't have to be remembered
Because you need an app for the login flow. You also don't have to remember passwords if you use a password manager app.
> don't need 2FA
Not true, a second factor in the form of eg a biometric ID or PIN is mandatory.
Phishing resistance exists, but only truly so if you completely surrender control over your device and access to your credentials. Something that the same organizations who you'll depend on for Passkeys are actively pushing for through various initiatives.
To be upfront about this, we’re still on AWS (Frankfurt), but "EU-owned" hosting/data regions will be available very soon.
Are there any reference implementations for any of mainstream programming language and web development frameworks for this use-case?
Apple is more a service provider than a hardware vendor these days. You can't realistically own Apple hardware without periodically connecting to Apple.
Thanks for sharing! Bookmarked immediately.
OVH's API allows full control of an account, but I don't know how that compares to DNSimple.
It's like a bad mix of culture (bordering on arrogance and pathological in some bad cases) and over regulation.
I always advise clients to avoid the EU at launch and focus on UK if they really want to do a test run and encourage them to focus on East Asia instead.
You'd think Europe is this affluent and sophisticated customer demographic but again and again from data I see it couldn't be further from the truth.
(as in "you are pushing shite no one wants but not accustomized to getting a well-deserved push-back")