It uses bubblewrap for sandboxing under the hood, right?
It uses bubblewrap for sandboxing under the hood, right?
mastodon.social exists
It’s literally there to take the choice away from new users
I’m too lazy… Yeah I am pretty nerdy, but I still don’t want to spend that much time caring about my selfhosting setup and building a homelab. But I’m glad it works for you, and I’m glad ente created their authenticator in the first place. I would have never expected it from them, since they only used to make ente photos, but there we go, they casually just created the best FOSS auth app.
I know, but I use the cloud hosted ente auth backup method on purpose, because I don’t trust myself with selfhosting and I’m too scared to accidentally rm -rf
my server and lose my 2FA seeds. That’s also why I don’t selfhost bitwarden, even though Vaultwarden is pretty great, and even offers Bitwarden Premium features for free (and I love it cause it’s written in Rust lol)
Actually this is exactly what the video talks about
youtube-local over a Mullvad (other services like Proton or IVPN are great as well) works really well for me
Is self hosting even worth it for auth? I self-host ente Photos myself, because that way I don’t need to pay for a subscription, but auth is free anyway, and the backups are entirely e2ee, right?
That’s definitely not beta, it feels more like a very early alpha
And it looks more like Hacker News or lobste.rs, not Lemmy or Reddit, since it doesn’t allow the creation of threads, only posting URLs?
Everything works except Thunderbolt/USB4 and Video output via USB-C
I wouldn’t use it as a NAS if you plan to use NVMe SSDs for fast storage (since you can’t connect them via USB4), but if you only plan on using SATA SSDs or mechanical drives, USB 3 should be fine. Other than that, everything you would need in a server is there and works flawlessly.
You can install Linux on ARM-based Macs too:
https://asahilinux.org/
!asahilinux@lemmy.world
So basically like a user style that you would use in Stylus? What are the differences, advantages/disadvantages?
Tell me more about that. How does it work?
That’s awesome
I’m not talking about DRM, but about Steam’s terms of service. Technically you only purchase a license to play the game, which can be taken away by Valve at any time. You don’t really own your copy of the game, as you would with physical media.
Sure, but you did you download them, listen to them and then delete them, or did you keep them around for archival purposes? Because it’s rather untypical to re-listen to a podcast episode many times, which you might do with music.
Removed by mod