Continue to be impressed with the quality and quantity of work Mauro is putting out for this project. Transition to management with JMAP replacing REST and TOML for configuration is major and glad to see the decision made to do it.
Created to work with Stalwart Mail server but from the FAQ:
(Does Bulwark work with non-Stalwart mail servers?
Bulwark communicates via the JMAP protocol (RFC 8620). Any mail server that implements JMAP should work. However, Stalwart is the primary tested backend and offers the best integration, including calendar, contacts, admin panel, and plugin management support. You can also configure custom JMAP server endpoints directly from the login page."
Seems like a neat project, but outside of Fastmail and selfhosting your own mailserver, there has not been much traction for JMAP over the decade it has been around.
IMAP meanwhile is still nearly universally supported, and there are many independent mail providers that will host your inbox for a low cost without being locked into paying Fastmail or running your own infrastructure.
JMAP for mail, contacts, calendar and files landed in Stalwart mail server about 5-6 months ago. In a discussion here on HN( https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45672336 ), a member( @solarkraft ) floated the idea of using Stawart as the "server" implementation of JMAP and using something like mbsync to sync IMAP from their mail provider. And build a client on top of this Stalwart "server." This might very well be the client to serve as a way to use the new JMAP protocols and not self-host.
> floated the idea of using Stawart as the "server" implementation of JMAP and using something like mbsync to sync IMAP from their mail provider. And build a client on top of this Stalwart "server."
That really does not seem like a workable solution. It would probably be brittle, require double the storage, require mapping of accounts and and credentials, would not account for caldav/carddav, etc.
If JMAP is to take off we need proper clients, servers and bridges. I'm not sure we even have one proper OSS implementation for each.
The two(2) H450s are in that unit cost range. The others and the Heron variants range to $40 million. A not insignificant number of Iranian aircraft(such as the US-produced F-5s and C-130s acquired before 1979's Revolution) are low unit costs comparably to the UAVs("drones") lost here.
Attrition compared to US materiel(not material - although that too greatly burdens cost to the US) depletion such as the aforementioned Patriot does not favor the US for sustained operations in theater(let alone should a second theater contingency operation occur).
I just looked it up. Those are turboprop (slower) but have a high ceiling of 50k feet. So Iran did have something better than stingers left. Maybe they just got lucky this time.
Infor is huge in the ERP space and dates back to bigger iron days(mainframe and midrange - IBM AS/400). They acquired a lot of smaller players over the years which might be way they are somewhat unknown these days unless you date yourself to that era.
Oh huh ... I actually did a lot of AS/400 & Stratus work back in the 80s. So Infor isn't written in RPG is it? the 400 actually had a decent COBOL compiler but everything seemed to end up in RPG :-/
I'm not a young man and my dad used to talk about and work on this stuff back in the 80's-90's he's long since retired. I think your best bet here would be to train someone I can't imagine there are many folks left who worked on these systems...
Interesting(unnerving?) to see a number of domain registrars that offer their own DNS services utilize at least some kind of Cloudflare service for at least their own web fronts. Did a check on 6 registrar sites I currently interact with and half were down(Namecheap/Spaceship, Name, Dynadot) and up(Porkbun, Gandi, GoDaddy).
I just considered moving from Namecheap to Porkbun as Namecheap is down, but Porkbun use Cloudflare for their CAPTCHA meaning I'm unable to signup and I assume log in as well, so also no good.
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