

That’s usually determined at the registrar level, not the registry level, though of course there are always exceptions.


That’s usually determined at the registrar level, not the registry level, though of course there are always exceptions.


Some ccTLDs have strict requirements (looking at you .de), but most are fairly standard TLDs. The last time I checked, .tv (for Tuvalu) was responsible for something like 40% of the country’s GDP, so it’s not surprising that most ccTLDs are welcoming to outsiders.


Check smoke detectors, clocks, plants near desks, anything that’s always been there and nobody questions.
To add to this as someone who has seen behind the curtain of how much of this tech is set up, lights are a common hiding place for cameras. Exit signs, parking lot lights, motion sensor lights, and the like. These are unfortunately also very difficult to detect by design, since they are expected to consume electricity, are almost always closed circuit with data wires parallel to the power wires, are practically impossible to observe in low light, and generate some heat even without any included surveillance equipment.


I don’t need it… I don’t need it… I don’t need it… I don’t need it…
(M.2/NVMe, LTE and 5G, GPIO)
I don’t…
(Planned support for LoRa, Meshtastic, and FPGAs)
I…
(Everything open source, useful for me at work, employer will pay for)
Sold!
It doesn’t seem to be especially performant for games based on the videos they’ve put out, but a solid handheld with these specific features, and separate from my mission critical work android phone will hopefully be very useful.
They don’t mess around with their requirements either and strictly enforce them. If you don’t follow their rules and your domain is deleted, there is no refund or recourse.