I might give it a shot. It looks like a good alternative. Thanks for the recommendation.
I might give it a shot. It looks like a good alternative. Thanks for the recommendation.
I used to love Vivaldi, but eventually it being a chromium browser forced me to switch back to Firefox and it’s children. If they switched over to using Firefox as a base rather than chromium then I’d consider it.
While it can be used in localized electrical power generation, this isn’t exactly best suited for just that. According to the video, the typical household uses 60% of their energy towards heating on average. This type of battery would already be storing thermal energy in the form that you need for this, so any conversion losses would already be accounted for; it would just be radiative losses while distributing the heat.
It sounds like they made their own bed with preferential treatment towards Manjaro.
It largely depends on the program. If the application has native Wayland support then it usually works pretty well, but apps that only run on X11 (which need to run through Xwayland) may be a little glitchy. It will depend on a lot of different variables including drivers, model, libraries, kernel, etc. But later this month Nvidia is to release new drivers that allow “explicit sync”, which should address a lot of this I believe.
After looking through it a little bit, it sounds like HIP is mainly used for verifying hosts’ identities. It sounds like you’ll still need firewall rules in order to create the scenario in your example, right?
Oof, yeah that doesn’t sound appealing. I was going to guess burnt like the other comment but slimy is worse.
What happened when you added flour?
I guess I’m doomed.
~Doom de doom doom de doom doom doom!
Nah, what they described is more like SSO between websites.
Ooh or “gender = null”
Yeah, Johnny Craig definitely has an history of messed up stuff. It makes me glad I prefer Kurt Travis’ vocals.
Thankfully it only lasted 2 years. But during that time it sounds like it was a plan to suppress the presidential competition that backfired. It’s good to know that humanity has always sucked.
Have you considered using Bitwarden Premium? It has TOTP support and is $10/year currently.
Also, regardless of how your hosting your data, it’s probably good to keep a secured backup of your vault or two just in case something unexpected happens.
Fair points. I’d say it depends on what we’re focusing on.
Maybe a good compromise would be to have the account that sent the message generate the preview. At least that way you’d maintain E2EE and save the webserver some unnecessary demand.
I can also see how this could be less reliable (because we’re now relying on a client with all sorts of variables) and less safe (malicious sender could mask malicious links with benign previews) than the server method but it all depends on which you prefer more.
After thinking about it in this situation, previews are just a nightmare to deal with privately and I’d probably just want to turn them off.
I agree. That’s a terrible choice to me.
Why would they not just offload this as a feature for the client to handle? At least then the security and privacy ultimately would be up to the user’s decision.
This isn’t exactly a platform specific problem because having local network access while using a VPN is actually a feature called “split-tunnelling”. The tunnelcrack issue goes beyond this but can be mitigated by using full tunnel VPN that resolves the server by IP address instead of DNS.
Ohh, sorry I misread your comment. Yeah, 2.5G WAN is a little trickier unless you go with something enterprise grade it seems.
It looks like Quad9 supports DoH: quad9