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Unfortunately improving existing products does not bring additional subscriptions / revenue 🤡
Unfortunately improving existing products does not bring additional subscriptions / revenue 🤡
Oh, why haven’t I thought about this sooner?
At least 4-5 years back, I want to test behaviors of WebKit circa iOS 13
My main fear with building the binary is that it would eventually require old dependencies that I do not have on my system.
I’m not familiar with flatpak-builder, does it handle dependencies not available on the system?
I know, but Flathub only offers versions built in 2024.
What I personally do is:
This way restic only has to process the data once.
I really like Readeck, it is very polished and the fact that it copies links content is very useful when saving Medium blog posts (and generally to make sure that I don’t lose the content if the linked page is ever removed)
I would have guessed React Native since Meta is pushing it so hard, now I know.
The Contributing Guide isn’t very helpful, but after skimming over the dependencies.gradle file and the repo’s Languages section, I can say that it’s a native Android app written with Jetpack Compose in Java and Kotlin (I assume they are progressively rewriting the app in Kotlin).
I have a completely different experience from yours: it would import random packages or rules and suggest stupid shit that made me disable the feature after less than 10 minutes of use. And again and again after IDE updates would re-enable the feature!
Soon we will have to call it GNU/systemd/Linux
Well, mine runs fine with a clean install of Ubuntu 23.10, I did not encounter any of the issues OP mentions. (note: my model doesn’t have a fingerprint sensor)
You don’t need TPM to enable LUKS. TPM allows you to store the LUKS keys in a secure enclave in order to automatically decrypt the drives on boot.
Ubuntu (on which Pop!_OS is based) only added support for TPM disk encryption in Ubuntu 23.10, so my guess is that you’ll have to wait for Pop!_OS 24.04
Note that, as I understand it, using TPM will only protect data on your encrypted disk if it is removed from your computer. If someone steals your entire computer, the disk will be decrypted on boot.
If you use a third-party’s DNS server (such as Cloudflare, Quad9 or Google) as your upstream DNS server, you only have to update PiHole.
If you have set up your own upstream DNS server using a DNS resolver like unbound or Bind9, update it as well as your PiHole.
I struggle to find if it uses DNSSEC or even a change log. If it does, contact the maintainer and disable DNSSEC (if you can) until a fix is released.
They maintain their own resolver, so they have to patch it if not done already.
It’s the latter. Unless you run your own DNS resolver, most people are safe
Way to push Fortune 200 companies towards Azul, Adoptium, Correto and other alternative Java distributions, Oracle!