I mostly use it for cloud backups but it also works great for local/network storage as well.
It's really fast and efficient, supports cutting edge encryption and compression algorithms and the de-duplication and file-splitting features will let you generate frequent snapshots while costing you minimal storage.
Snapshots are also effortless to mount and it even supports error correction to protect against bit-flipping and other long-term storage risks.
It's also cross-platform and FOSS.
De-duplication prevents duplicate bits of data from being stored twice. Even if they are different file names or even synced from different systems.
The rolling hash/file-splitting means if you modify a 25GB file and only change a couple MB then only the changed couple MB will need to be stored. This means you can spend a month modifying small parts of a massive file thousands of times and avoid storing a new 25GB file thousands of times to archive those changes.
Which means (unless I grossly misunderstand the concept)
that your video(s) are stored not only on your own server but also shared out to other servers which also keep a copy cached.
So in this scenario it would be very much immune to these concerns because your video(s) will be streamed from the closest federated server to you which has a copy, meaning you will always get the best throughput no matter what your physical location is or what it was when you uploaded.
Politicians are supposed to follow the will of their constituents.
His responsibility is to the people. Of course he can change his mine, but he should still do his job for the people who elected him and if that is contrary to his own beliefs to the point where he is unable to do so then he should resign.
You had me second-guessing for a minute, but I think the other commenter is correct.
One can definitely use Spaces in other clients, even Beeper supports them. So if it was an Element-specific feature, it doesn't appear to be any longer.
Haha nope not KDE-related afaik!
Just a great FOSS project.
Did I mention it's also ridiculously fast?
It quite noticeably out-performs any other solution I've tried.