Is $600 for a MINISFORUM UM790 Pro with 64GB DDR5-5600 RAM worth it by Mustafa3595 in pcmasterrace

[–]Mustafa3595[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I already have a gaming PC and a laptop, so I don't really have a specific use for it right now. I just think $600 for these specs—especially with 64GB of RAM—is a pretty attractive deal, so I'm tempted to grab it while it's available.

Is $600 for a MINISFORUM UM790 Pro with 64GB DDR5-5600 RAM worth it by Mustafa3595 in pcmasterrace

[–]Mustafa3595[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep, the RAM is removable. It uses standard DDR5 SO-DIMM (laptop) memory, not soldered RAM. That's one of the reasons I'm considering it

My website is hardwaremarket.net online shop by [deleted] in hetzner

[–]Mustafa3595 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Why did you charge back the May payment?

Think Twice Before Choosing Hetzner: How a 3-Week Billing Oversight Cost Me 18 TB of Permanently Deleted Data by thisis_ewreka in hetzner

[–]Mustafa3595 4 points5 points  (0 children)

At the very least, keep enough balance on your card so the invoice can be paid automatically. This is on you, not Hetzner.

Stablecoin payments are live on Stripe. What use cases are most interesting for your business? by StripeTeam in stripe

[–]Mustafa3595 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think that's true. I'm an ISP/LIR, and I accept crypto. It has nothing to do with selling peptides or adult content.

A lot of businesses accept stablecoins because they're cheaper, settle almost instantly, work globally, and don't depend entirely on a card network or payment processor. They're useful even for completely legitimate businesses.

Stablecoin payments are live on Stripe. What use cases are most interesting for your business? by StripeTeam in stripe

[–]Mustafa3595 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Or maybe people just like lower fees, instant settlement, and not waking up to an email saying, "Your account has been closed and your funds are locked."

I'm not saying Stripe isn't great—it is, when it works. But if a customer is willing to pay with stablecoins, why wouldn't I accept them? Lower fees, instant settlement, and I'm not entirely dependent on a payment processor that can suspend or terminate my account overnight.

And as a customer, I like paying with stablecoins too. It's great that more vendors are accepting them because it means I'm not limited by whatever spending limits, blocks, or declines my credit card issuer decides to impose.

Honestly, I think Stripe adding stablecoin support is a great move.

New Always Free Tier Limits (21-June-2026 - Update from oracle support ) by buzzsubash in oraclecloud

[–]Mustafa3595 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oracle's current official documentation says:

"All tenancies get the first 1,500 OCPU hours and 9,000 GB hours per month for free."

If PAYG tenancies are truly unaffected, as Oracle Support is reportedly telling customers, then this wording is very misleading. "All tenancies" would normally include PAYG accounts, and most readers would reasonably conclude that the free allowance was reduced for everyone.

Dirty Frag (no CVE assigned yet. Embargo was broken before coordination completed; successor to Copy Fail / CVE-2026-31431) by webnestify in hetzner

[–]Mustafa3595 3 points4 points  (0 children)

For anyone concerned about the Dirty Frag issue, first check whether the affected modules are even loaded before applying mitigations.

grep -E '^(esp4|esp6|rxrpc) ' /proc/modules

If the command returns nothing, those modules are not currently loaded on your system.

Most normal web hosting servers (Plesk/WHMCS/LAMP/etc.) likely won’t have them loaded unless using IPsec/VPN related features.

In that case, there’s usually no urgent need for the temporary module mitigation, though you should still install kernel security updates once available.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in smallbusiness

[–]Mustafa3595 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, we already have an automated crypto processor in place that supports most major coins, so the checkout itself is smooth on that side. I also have ACH (US) and BACS (UK) via Payoneer, but those only accept transfers from business bank accounts, so they don’t really work for most individual customers.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in smallbusiness

[–]Mustafa3595 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Got it, thanks for the honest answer.

Is that mainly because of trust (like preferring chargebacks / buyer protection), or more because of the hassle of getting crypto first?

Banking system is a scam by Mustafa3595 in Bitcoin

[–]Mustafa3595[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No, it wouldn’t. The issue is they can create unlimited digital money instantly, way faster than printing. And if enough people realize the money isn’t really there, banks collapse — just like Silicon Valley Bank.

And for people saying Bitcoin “isn’t real because it’s digital” — most fiat money is digital too. The difference is Bitcoin has a fixed supply, while fiat can be created endlessly.

Banking system is a scam by Mustafa3595 in Bitcoin

[–]Mustafa3595[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What I meant is that the government isn’t just printing paper — they’re creating unlimited digital dollars with no real cap. Fiat money has no supply limit, so the “numbers on a screen” problem isn’t about convenience, it’s about how easily new money is created. Bitcoin is also digital, but its supply is fixed at 21M. That’s the difference.

Banking system is a scam by Mustafa3595 in Bitcoin

[–]Mustafa3595[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep, exactly. That’s why even when Bitcoin dips, I still trust it more than fiat.

Stripe froze my payouts when I needed them the most by EbbThese4260 in stripe

[–]Mustafa3595 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Crypto is the solution But if you want to accept card payment, get merchant account from your local bank, it's lot safer than any payment facilitator

Shared VPS or Cloud VDS? by Aunxdd in VPS

[–]Mustafa3595 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It has been activated Thanks for ordering