Sadly the Android app is no longer maintained, and it hasn’t been released for newer versions of Android.
Professional software engineer, musician, gamer, stoic, democratic socialist
Sadly the Android app is no longer maintained, and it hasn’t been released for newer versions of Android.
There’s an unmaintained Windows client.
Actually here is one that’s still active: https://github.com/IJHack/QtPass
Sounds a lot like the AT Protocol.
Sir, I estimate the project will be completed in 135 days and 11 hours.
Talos Principle 2. So far I’m enjoying it just as much as the first one.
I’m not in the market, but I’ve actually had similar thoughts of building a project on top of NixOS that’s focused on self-hosting for homes and small businesses. I recently deployed my own router/server on a BeeLink mini PC and instead of using something like OpenWRT, I used NixOS, systemd-networkd, nftables, etc.
DM me if you want to discuss more. I think the idea has potential and I might be interested in helping if you can get the business model right (even if it just ends up being some FOSS thing).
Sorry if this sounds like a conspiracy theory, but how do we know that BlueSky isn’t padding their stats with internal bots? I could see this being a viable strategy to attract users and overcome the social network bootstrapping problem.
How can you tell?
Stop using Brave, people.
I think Kodi is a good choice, but not really sufficient for everything you might want to do IMO.
You could also look into KDE Plasma Bigscreen. It’s still pretty rough around the edges, but I think it aims to do what you want.
I am actually thinking about building something similar with different tech, as I’m not satisfied with any of the existing options. I really want something that’s primarily controlled via a mobile Web interface like the Kore app for Kodi.
The only correct answer is to be consistent with the code base you’re working in or the language’s conventions. If neither of these conventions exist, then someone has already failed you.
Nothing about networking?
Use udev rules to get a stable name.
How Linux Fanboys see Linux:
It’s so ironic how many downvotes this is getting in the context of this thread.
This reminds me of the apparent gnome-keyring security hole. It’s mentioned in the first section of the arch wiki entry: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/GNOME/Keyring
Any application can read keyring entries of the other apps. So it’s pretty trivial to make a targeted attack on someone’s account if you can get them to run an executable on their machine.
There’s also the Wayblue family of Wayland distros, based on Ublue.
It’s hard to say for certain whether a distro will work for your hardware, even the Nvidia-specific images can have bugs related to the Nvidia drivers or their interaction with compositors.
I’ve used NixOS for a year.
I also tried Fedora Sway Atomic for a week or so. It mostly worked well, but I eventually found that it’s really hard to use Nix for development on a graphics application, because linking with the system Vulkan drivers is near impossible. The loader used by Nix’s glibc will ignore FHS locations. That seems to rule out a lot of the benefits of using Nix.
So I gave up on using Nix + Fedora as a failed experiment and went back to NixOS.
My wish list for Nix, Wayland, and Sway is pretty long. I kinda wish I had the time to make a new distro.
So I’m seeing “Window Protocol: wayland” in about:support
. Seems like somehow I’m just not affected by this issue.
Away from PC for a while but I’ll check when I’m back.
This makes me so nervous about how AI is going to influence children and adolescents of the coming generations. From iPad kids to AI teens. They’ll be at a huge risk of dissociation from reality.