My solution to this has been symlinks. All the media files I download maintain their original names and structures so they can continue seeding, and I maintain a separate folder structure that complies with Jellyfin's naming conventions. All the files are just symlinked so they don't take up any additional space, and I have a couple small scripts to check for missing/broken links.
Like ebg13 said, you need to ask them. That said, I seriously doubt it's GDPR related. It might be pricing, but I'm skeptical that Pearson charges significantly extra for parent accounts.
As someone who had PowerSchool through highschool though, it sucks for students with overprotective parents. Friends who did poorly on an exam would be getting angry texts from their parents before they even got home for the day. Friends who decided to skip a class to have fun would have their parents notified within a few minutes of the start of the class. It's a pretty powerful tool for helicopter parenting, and I would have much preferred if my school didn't have parent accounts. I'd still talk to my parents about school, and tell them when I did badly, but I'd get to bring it up at a good time and handle it in person instead of them knowing my grades often before I did.
Now I'm curious, what do they mean in America? As a Canadian I think both words describe a single unit in a multi-story building, but say "apartment" if the entire building is owned by one company and all units are rented, and "condo" if each unit is sold to an individual owner (who may still rent it out privately if they want). I rent an apartment, I'd buy a condo. They're physically the same thing, just different ownership models. Most Canadians I know (Vancouver/Calgary) do the same.
I think this is exactly it. As someone who has been using solely DuckDuckGo for a couple years, including for technical searches (I'm a software developer), I find using Google noticeably frustrating
because Google doesn't give me the results I'm looking for but DDG does.
I think I'm just used to the nuances of DDG where others (who currently use Google) are used to the nuances of Google. You get used to crafting search queries in a specific way, and having to change it is noticeable.
For Vancouver? Yes, that's cheap. You may only get one bedroom, but you also have shared access to the rest of the luxury mansion. It's not $1500 for one room.
I'll second this, I've also debated law school time to time. Every time I start to get disillusioned with tech (the vast majority of tech jobs do nothing to improve the world or help people) I consider criminal defense.
I use Linux, Windows, and Android. I decided on Pass [1] and it's been working really well for me. I have a dedicated PGP key that encrypts all my passwords, and they're stored on my own git server.
On Linux I use the pass command, on Windows I use QtPass [2], and on Android I use Password Store [3] and OpenKeychain [4] (for the PGP key).
My "master password" is the password for the PGP key, and I type it each time I want a password. Git keeps everything in sync. If one of my devices is compromised, you still need the password for the PGP key. If my git server is compromised, you'd need the PGP key (which isn't on the server).
Why use a PGP key instead of symmetric encryption (either with a random key encrypted with your master password, or a key derived from your master password)?
Staging, especially partially staging hunks and lines when doing multiple things at once, is way easier in a GUI when you can scroll around for context and easily undo.
For everything else I prefer the command line, because it's faster and I know exactly what is going to happen. I can do what I need to do, no fighting. If I'm just committing everything, I use the CLI. If it's more complicated I use the GUI to stage and commit, and a CLI to rebase/merge/push.