I just installed the floris 4.0 beta earlier. I think once they ship 4.0 and offer a type-ahead suggestion model Floris'll be worth considering as a serious Gboard replacement.
So far Floris is the best Gboard replacement candidate I've found.
Buy external drives. Don't run them in RAID, use one to store backups and plug it in once or twice a week to copy data to it.
The secret to RAID is that it doesn't buy you data protection, it buys you uptime to access data while a device in the array is failed. This is most valuable to businesses that can't afford the downtime that recovery from a backup incurs. The most paranoid RAID will still fail sooner or later, due to hardware or software failure, and as a home user with a limited budget you're far better off having one offline backup that you can use to recover data from once that happens.
Backup only data you can't afford to lose (eg: don't backup downloaded data that can be replaced easily, like a game or movie collection) and your backups will be much more manageably sized and you won't need to spend as much on your backup drive. If a backup disk is too much for your budget you can always exploit cloud backup plans, backblaze PC backup has no limit on the size of your backups and only charges something like ~$60/yr.
Edit: It's also worth thinking about what kind of data you're storing and splitting that data across multiple devices if possible. If you're storing bulk data where performance isn't critical, like backups from other machines or a movie collection, you can pay a much lower price by buying a hard drive instead of flash. Even if only some of your data requires fast flash you can still use a cheaper HDD to store bulk data and buy a smaller flash drive for performance sensitive tasks. When I build NAS I split my data two pools, one bulk pool of HDDs and one much smaller fast pool comprised of flash storage. Put performance critical data on flash, put bulk storage on HDDs, this will allow you to spend less on bulk and still have fast storage performance for tasks that require it. A 512GB or 1TB SSD alongside a 4TB, 6TB or 8TB HDD is significantly cheaper than spending on a 4TB or 8TB SSD.
Shop eBay for refurbished storage, it'll be significantly cheaper than spending on brand new drives.
Let's put it this way, for most Americans it would be cheaper to fly to Cuba, stay in a hotel and have any medical work done there than it would be to pay for similar healthcare in the US.
You can get amazing world class healthcare in the US but you pay a similarly amazing world class price for it.
(Edit: Oh and by the way shitty healthcare also carries these world class prices, think of the shareholders!)
I hate to break it to you Joe but long term symptom management is a hell of a lot more profitable than prevention or a cure. Even if we did come up with a cure for cancer you can bet your ass that the pharma industry would tie it up in regulation and or litigation as long as they possibly could.
It's pretty good at proving digital chain of custody. You could, for example, handle public records on a block chain.
I've been hoping for a game platform that tokenizes game licenses so that we can sell or gift them to others when we're done with them - basically steam but you own your copy of the game and can sell it on. This is incredibly unlikely to happen though, a secondary market for digital licenses would eviscerate profits.
Mokka pots are one of my favorite brew methods but they're super particular if you want a really stellar cup. Grind coarse, do not tamp, pull the heat ASAP when the pot starts to spit at the end and/or when the color of the brewed coffee starts to lighten and you'll get a great brew.
I can't imagine using a restrictive filter in there when just changing from coarse to fine grind or tamping affects extraction so much. I expect you'd have a much better result just filtering fines after the fact like you're doing.
I usually don't even pour all of the mokka pot brew into my cup, I leave the last bit with the most fines in the pot and just dump it. You can also let the coffee sit for a little bit (a minute or so) after pouring it into your cup and most of the fines will settle to the bottom.
If anyone's holding a copy of this repo as of its last published state before the rollback hit me up, I'd love to have a copy of it stashed away to play with.
git bundle should be able to dump the entire repo as a single archive if you have a cloned copy sitting somewhere on disk.
Sorry, the best we can do is $20 and we wish you good luck