It defeats the purpose in the scenario that your vault is stolen and decrypted. But it still protects you in the much more likely scenario that a data breach exposes your password somewhere else.
It defeats the purpose in the scenario that your vault is stolen and decrypted. But it still protects you in the much more likely scenario that a data breach exposes your password somewhere else.
I tried Tumbleweed for a while but ended up going back to Fedora. Super polished while still fast moving.
btrfs send/receive to my NAS.
Just FYI “Software” in that agreement specifically refers to Red Hat branded software, so it isn’t quite as clear cut if you debrand it before redistributing it.
I should automate something like that too. I just have one A record pointing to my IP and all my subdomains CNAME’d to that so that if it ever changes, I just have to update that one record.
My IP isn’t technically static but it hasn’t changed in the 3 years I’ve been with this ISP.
The latest test update today mentions it’s been in App Store review for at least 12 hours now. So hopefully soon.
Decently surprised at how well it performs for a PWA.
I’m okay technically with Snap, and I appreciate that it can do CLI programs as well which Flatpak can’t (to my knowledge. My issue with it is that Canonical has dug their feet in on making their store the default and only package source for everyone. It’s clear to me that they want to be the gatekeepers of software on Linux.
I can’t open the link right now cause it seems to have gotten the hug of death, but if they didn’t mention it check out Caddy. It handles the certificates all automatically. All you have to do is set up the DNS record and then point Caddy at your internal service and it handles the rest.
Man I would be so nervous to trust Oracle with my credit card though.
Just FYI Oracle has language that reserves the right to shut down free tier machines that they deem “idle”.
https://docs.oracle.com/en-us/iaas/Content/FreeTier/freetier_topic-Always_Free_Resources.htm
Nice thank you. I use both.
I ran it for a while but ultimately didn’t trust myself to harden it enough.
You need to set up a local DNS server with a .servername
zone and point your machines to it. You’d add an external DNS server like 1.1.1.1 as forwarder to allow internet traffic to still resolve.
I think it normally wouldn’t be as big of a deal, but with how bare the Xbox exclusive library is, they really need all they can get.
Memmy is very new but is rapidly being developed.
We’ve come full circle
HiDPI scaling has been completely broken in Linux ever since the UI update and for some reason Valve is slow in fixing it.