This would have been better with Rust and C++
I joined Lemmy back in 2020 and have been using it as qaz@lemmy.ml until somewhere in 2023 when I switched to lemmy.world. I’m interested in Linux, FOSS, and several other subjects.
This would have been better with Rust and C++
Since the method is encryption of the notes folder, I would consider it to be one
This is a security risk! Some note taking apps store data outside of the notes directory (e.g. Logseq)
What does it say if you ask it to explain “exaggeration”?
What’s the difference between the normal app and element X? Why create a new app?
EDIT: I installed it, but can’t verify for some reason.
EDIT: It works now, and it’s very fast compared to the other client. It’s a shame spaces aren’t supported.
They use fax
C exists
It’s also a lot easier to do so with Rust because you can easily statically compile it with the musl target so you don’t even rely on the system’s libc version.
Of course not, but then there’s not really a point to using another Pi instead of your main machine, right?
The Raspberry Pi Zero has a 32-bit CPU, the newer big RPI’s have 64-bit CPU’s. Wouldn’t that cause problems?
Numeric .xyz domains only cost $1 a year. They’re not great for things like mail because they’re often used by spammers (probably because of the price), but it’s great for cheap signed DNS hostnames.
I point it to the server on my local network and use Wireguard to connect myself.
Didn’t that mode already exist in the game?
I still wonder why they decided to write their own UI framework from scratch.
Rider can do code replacement too and has worked much better in my experience
The company I work for loves Azure. If it’s not available as an Azure service it won’t be used (except for uptime kuma). Some time ago there was a global Azure outage and we could do literally nothing. All tasks and code were on Azure Devops and all communication went through Teams and Outlook.
The webhook integration has also recently been removed from Teams so uptime kuma also didn’t work for like a week until it was fixed by using Azure’s automation service.
Just like how people should use long unique passwords
A lot of cryptowallets let the user log in with a randomly generated combination of words. They often ask the user to write those down on paper. However, some people just screenshot that. This malware looks for those combinations specifically.
A classmate I was doing a project with saved his code as screenshots in a word document.
It’s a surrealist metaphor
With Rust it’s usually just a fluke that can be fixed by doing that, but C++ linker errors may indicate the start of several frustrating hours. That’s been my experience at least.