And in the porygon episode (sort of)
And in the porygon episode (sort of)
They also accept pulling the power cord out as “oh no” and shutdown for you!
I didn’t know it was native too!
I wanted to check out bitwarden as a self hosted service, but looks like I better stick with good ol’ keepass+Syncthing
I’d actually recommend consent-o-matic instead of IDCAC. It actually selects the minimum concent for you instead of just hiding it.
It’s definitely viable. Just not for me, like dark souls.
I tried nix because it seemed cool, but dipped fast due to things like this. Definitely not a desktop distro (at least for me)
Recent update big update or just good maintenance?
As up to date as Debian
(Obviously a joke, Debian is great)
True. For now I got a combo of Firefox and Firefox focus. Set focus as default browser, and if you do need cookies, copy the link.
I think they are referring to crates vs binaries vs cargo binaries.
Crates are your libraries, not meant to be standalone, binaries are your .exe, cargo binaries are meant to be compiled by cargo on your machine and run through cargo, ex: cargo sqlx
They might also refer test binaries and example binaries which are two executables that only compile the tesrs and the examples to make sure they work, but apart from that idk
I love this game. On multi screen it gets so big
Don’t put a fast charger for overnight charge. It degrades the battery. I got my charger hooked up to my server’s usb port and it’s able to charge a 10000mha battery overnight at nearly 100% from low percents.
Fair enough. As long it’s simple commands it’s fine, but when going to do platform builds then attach to release it’s a pain.
It’s mostly that Librewolf is a bit like incognito mode by default and it may be confusing for new users.
If you really want to go power mode you can create multiple profiles with different cookie policies. Great to organise yourself and keep cookies where they belong
Either you go the firefox account way (librewolf has it turned off by default but you can turn it back up)
Or you go the manual way. Go to your about:profiles
, open both directory for your profile data, and the folders in the corresponding librewolf folder (that you can check by going in about:profiles
on librewolf).
Here’s two tips:
This is the essential thing to learn for librewolf. The settings are quite aggressive so you may need to disable the protection. And for websites you want to stay logged in, it’s opt-in.
For a second I thought it was the Linux comunity