

Yum-cron
Hmmm, I’ve heard some people use watchtower too.
Yum-cron
Hmmm, I’ve heard some people use watchtower too.
The lines between mobile device and server get blurred even more.
Did you check to be sure that DuckDNS knows your current home external IP address?
Quite a lot of cryptography detail in their blog post, not all of which do I understand. Curious to find out what the community thinks of this …
For instance:
We’ve re-built the Tuta cryptographic protocol from the ground up and are now upgrading our encryption using quantum-resistant algorithms together with conventional algorithms (Kyber in combination with AES 256 and ECDH x25519 in a hybrid protocol) for our asymmetric public key encryption of emails
I know Bruce Schneier says rolling your own Crypto is hard and most will get it wrong. So is it concerning that they made their own encryption protocol?
Wouldn’t that be only between Tutanota users anyway?
Just since nobody else answered your question: No. A Tuta user can send an encrytped message to anyone (including non-Tuta users). Those users then get an unecrypted message, saying “Click here to read your message”, which takes them to the Tuta site, which lets them see the message. The non-Tuta user can then reply to the Tuta user as they like.
But you’re right about the UI. Tuta users have to use the Tuta UIs (mobile, desktop, web).
Oh, that reminds me,…
No idea why you want that, but still… does this help any?
https://askubuntu.com/questions/17134/rhythmbox-still-plays-songs-after-exit
My only complaint with Rhythmbox is that it lets you close it while playing a song and then the ui is gone but the song keeps playing. Insanity!
I can’t believe they’re still around
Lol, its not like they force you to retake the test if you don’t want to.
I use Discreet Launcher on the same phone
Tuta – https://tuta.com/
Includes mail and calendar and contacts. No files, or password management. But worth a look, if you want an encrypted solution and you’re OK with using their client apps. I do, and I am and it’s great, IMO.
Their blogs say they’re pro-privacy, and anti-BS, if you believe them: https://tuta.com/blog
Yeah, I want to say, Bandcamp was sold to a new company last year but so far, it’s pretty much the same as before. I can see someome saying they have some beef with them, but I still use them fairly often, to support lesser known bands when I can. And they schedule special Friday events where they don’t collect any fees - all music sold on those days goes straight to the artists. Sooo much better than the evil Spotify.
I would love to know of a good alternative to Bandcamp, but don’t rule it out entirely, IMO.
Why don’t stories like this EVER mention Lemmy?
I love the instance I’m on and it’s fairly quiet. Come on in!
For anyone curious, that comes from
My requirement with this page is it has to load really fast, because I return to it often while working / browsing. So yeah, it’s really lightweight and easy to maintain, as things come and go. The source is stored in Forgejo! (the “Code” button there).
I just hacked a simple HTML page for this, with big mobile friendly buttons.
That page is served by nginx in my server and is my default home page on my phone and desktop.
For any other Audiobookshelf users looking at that article and thinking, “Wait, how did they get that nice wooden shelf look in the UI?”
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