He’s like, your GPS isn’t bad. I can track you just fine.
He’s like, your GPS isn’t bad. I can track you just fine.
I have never met a flat earther, but if I did and she was hot I’d see what else I could convince her to believe.
It means that questioning decisions or problems is seen as negative in the community generally and that everyone else must be wrong for not using NixOS.
As I used to say. The Nix community acts more like a cult of people willing to support flat earth.
I shit on JavaScript for years… but Deno (built around Rust) is honestly one of the most pleasant tools I’ve used for development, and you get all the completion in VS Code.
deleted by creator
I use Hyrpland, and so there are times where I need to use GTK or Qt tools. I generally don’t like KDE-based tools though because they are dependency-heavy.
They already have, and they can do it in secret and hold people without trial. Once you give someone power, it’s hard to take it away.
So does many of the GTK tools though… so, again… why use Qt at all if you want to save memory.
I like some of LXQt tools, but at one point do you decide if you’re going to use Qt… why not just go all out and use KDE?
Why is it that it seems like Gnome seems to be implementing Windows bad practices? The last thing Linux needs is a Windows registry. One of the greatest benefits of Linux IMO is the ability to configure applications in config files… not having to use some custom tool to manage the configuration.
You summed it up better than I ever could. I’d give you lemmy gold if that was a thing.
Great… now if AMD actually cares about virtualization, maybe they can stop limiting virtual GPUs to their enterprise GPUs. Damn monopolies really don’t want to see consumers have full virtualization support for Windows on Linux.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Okay, well it’s just the vulnerabilities you mentioned were geared towards email client issues that among other things would automatically load HTML data upon decryption. Furthermore, primary vulnerable targets were 10 year old email clients at the time that hadn’t received any security updates. The SE data packet issue had been documented even in the spec since at least 2007 about its security issues and recommended rapid mitigation techniques. All in all, the EFAIL documented issues with mail client failures, not with OpenPGP itself.
Second, OpenPGP web-of-trust, or whatever you want to call it (public keyservers) is entirely optional. In fact, Proton relies heavily on this in from what I can tell actually enforces it in a more insecure way, but opting users into their internal keyserver automatically.
It’s quite possible that privacy is too hard for you and trash talking open source makes you feel better about the money you’re paying to someone else to say they’ll do a better job for you.
Such a security risk though, but still better than curling scripts into sudo