Depends on the configuration, but most likely yes. The reason being that your custom domain will have a MX record which points to the blocked email provider.
If the MX points to a domain and the domain is already blocked it will stop there.
If the MX points to a domain and the IP is blocked, it will resolve the domain, see the IP of your provider and stops there.
If the MX points to a IP and the IP is blocked, it stops there.
If the MX points to an IP and only the domain would be blocked, it might go through ... unless they also check the reverse DNS entry, which may show the domain and thus will block it as well.
Thanks for the suggestions, but no, I have not. I am not looking to replace my mail app, but to remove it from my phone/desktop entirely and instead running something similiar on a server, so I can access it from my phone/desktop when needed.
but then you’d still have to have your mobile mail client go and download all this mail you said is a battery drain, so you’re sort of negating yourself.
That is precisely my point. I do not want a mobile or desktop client anymore. Just a client which is running on a system which is always running anyway to send me a notification and I can then decide if I will check it out now or if it can wait.
Proprietary mobile clients often work similarly, they do the "heavy lifting" on the server side, send a notification, but only temporarily load the mails you explicitly view temporarily on the device. And thus, they use less battery and storage of the device. Another benefit for the unified client would be faster sync of mail status (e.g. read/unread) as it is only one client on the IMAP server instead of one on each device. And another benefit would be not having to migrate email clients when replacing devices.
That being said if youre looking for performance, the last thing you'd want is open source nvidia drivers; theyre built entirely off reverse engineering, which takes time.
Pretty sure that is not true anymore since a couple of years. Only newer cards can capitalise the gains from the 'official' open drivers though.
Depends on what you want to play. If you want to play current games with current hardware then current kernel and drivers help a lot. A base Debian would (if it even works) probably less FPS than an current gaming distro.
Oracle Cloud is the bane of my existence. You login to get to another login mask, which uses a different login. Usually one of the logins forces you to change the password, as I rarely login. And I am probably stupid with it, but it seems that even when you just changed your password, it may not work, while the previous one still does. Basically every time I login I try myself through 5-6 passwords to find the currently working ones. And then you are typically in the wrong data center and changing it may force you go login again. Overall a horrible experience, I would recommend to no one.
I would love to see these games on GOG. As of now a lot of the can be found on the high seas alone, sadly. (Looking at Black&White there)