๐œau

@๐œau@discuss.tchncs.de
1 Post – 16 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

๐œ > ฯ€

To save you a click (although none of the other commenters seem to have read the article anyway): The microchips aren't embedded into the actual cheese that you eat, but are part of the label attached to the outside rind. Nobody will be eating microchips.

I suppose free ones, new generic TLDs that aren't owned by some trustworthy company or organization that will probably continue to exist for the forseeable future, and country code TLDs from countries without stable governments or a reputable institution managing the TLD.

What would annoy me about it at least, is the implication that whatever you're currently doing doesn't matter at all. To him, whatever is currently on his mind takes precedence over anything you could possibly be doing at the same time. He doesn't even think about how important or relevant to you the thing is that he wants to show you, because he doesn't value your time the same as his. You're supposed to just drop everything and do as you're told.

Not telling you what it's about also increases the sense of urgency (the implication being that there's no time to explain; the bird could be gone from the windowsill or the kid could have fallen out of the window) while at the same time making it harder to make an informed decision about actually hurrying over or refusing. If you'd ask for an explanation, it might already be too late after all.

Because people generally want a user experience similar to Reddit, I think it's inevitable that most user activity will be concentrated in one or two instances.

Two obvious reasons for joining smaller, more local instances are language and region. At least along those axes, there will naturally be decentralization.

It just doesn't make much sense to have communities on instances where most people on that instance can't participate in discussions due to the language barrier or because topics are specific and only relevant to a certain region.

There are already plenty of growing instances like that for specific regions or languages that are likely here to stay: feddit.de, lemmy.ca, midwest.social, aussie.zone, feddit.uk, feddit.it, feddit.dk, feddit.nl, lemmy.nz, feddit.cl, feddit.pt, ...

Simon Tatham's Puzzle Collection. Just a bunch of cool puzzles for wasting time. No ads or bells and whistles.

You can download them or just play in the browser. Someone also made the collection into an Android app, which I usually use.

Have a look at rsync-sidekick maybe.

Not a fan of reflinking (as you do with the VPS link) without at least acknowledging that you're profiting when people use it.

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Not sure why I see this one recommended so much. Seems like it's run by just one dude who won't always be able to respond to support requests, security issues and other emergencies in the time frames you'd want with such a service. I also really wouldn't want to bet my ability to securely access/send/receive important emails on that one person in Delaware not randomly getting hit by a car or something.

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adblocker, sponsorblock and this

I'd even add Unhook (hide Trending, Shorts, Merch, replace "Home Feed" with subscriptions etc.) and Age Restriction Bypass (avoid the need to verify your account with a credit card). I also use Clickbait Remover. It essentially does the same as DeArrow without the crowdsourcing, which is already good enough for me.

By default, if there are no submissions, it will [...] set a screenshot from a random timestamp as the thumbnail.

Would it be possible to extract the most watched position from the watch graph in the seek bar or use positions that were already tagged as highlights in sponsorblock for better defaults?

But does it really matter if it's possible for us to make such predictions? If a hypothetical omniscient observer (i.e. Laplace's demon) could predict all your decisions, then that already shows that they're deterministic. Us not being able to actually do the determination wouldn't change the fact that there is a definitive state of the universe for any point in time.

IMO KeePassXC's UI is way better than Bitwarden's, but Bitwarden has very convenient syncing and a browser extension that actually works with almost any website.

I used to use KeePassXC and KeepassDX on my phone, syncing them through Syncthing. But depending on Syncthing and the clients always making the right changes to the one database file without destroying something never felt good and always having to run Syncthing in the background on my phone probably didn't do its battery life any favors.

Add to that some frustrations with the browser extension and that's why I decided to switch to Bitwarden in the end.

Haven't used it myself and it seems to be in relatively early development, but Movary might be worth a look then.

Edit: An alternative that is not open source, but still privacy respecting and a bit more featureful might be rate.house:

Privacy Policy Summary

  • We do not have any advertisements.
  • We do not give your data to anyone.
  • You have full control of your data.

itโ€™s direct support for all services including the server for admin.social

Sounds like there's no reason not to be transparent about it then.

I've been using Kopia on my desktop computer for a few years now to do cloud backups. It's generally working well and I haven't found anything else with the same combination of features yet.

That said, kopia-ui is still a bit finicky and I've managed to bork a repo beyond repair a few times (e.g. once because my cloud provider account ran out of space, leading to some kind of inconsistent state) and there are some oddities, like the regular "periodic maintenance" (it's a bit weird that it's needed in the first place) randomly failing or taking forever.

It is (or can be) just as secure as a non-mnemonic passcode. The mnemonic aspect just helps with typing it out without errors.

You're not really supposed to remember the mnemonic passcode, but save it in your password manager and/or print it out and store it in a secure location.

Now if you need to use your printed out mnemonic passcode, you just have to type in a bunch of normal words instead of a very long list of random characters and symbols, where it's easy to make mistakes.

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