cool ! I am using Hews, but I might switch to this.
cool ! I am using Hews, but I might switch to this.
This release includes major improvements to performance, specifically optimizations of database queries. Special thanks to @phiresky, @ruud, @sunaurus and many others for investigating these.
Love to see the community coming together to improve things !
there is a page about this on the lemmy docs: https://join-lemmy.org/docs/users/05-censorship-resistance.html
this made me realize one of the things I like about the old design is how many posts you can see at a glance.
it comes down to wayland, i3 only supports Xorg, sway only supports wayland.
as far as features goes sway was built to be pretty much a drop in replacement for i3 with a few improvements.
same, I just checked, I bought the full version in 2016 (for like a dollar ?) and been using it since.
long time i3 user, now switched to sway
I think its a nice alternative to developers to offer software that is not available on your package manager, but having a distro offer multiple different ways of installing a package is not a good idea, I’m talking about ubuntu of course, as a user I just want to apt-get update/upgrade
and be sure my system is up to date, snap undermines that because I’m not sure anymore. also I don’t understand why I need to close the app I’m using to update it with snap, if the app is containerized I should be able to install multiple versions without affecting each other.
yup pretty sure
$ cat /etc/passwd
fox:hunter2:1000:1000::/home/fox:/usr/bin/zsh
😉
you don’t need to be root to read /etc/passwd
its like they say, trust is hard to earn, easy to lose. I still like CDPR but there’s no denying they burned a lot of trust with cyberpunk.
I mean yeah, the only reason people have to believe elder scrolls 6 is in development is that teaser from 2018, and honesty they probably only made that teaser to temper expectations.
love parallel !, for example encoding a bunch wavs to opus:
parallel --eta 'opusenc --bitrate 256 {} {.}.opus' ::: *.wav
However, the two Jumpsec Red Team members found that they could go around the restriction by changing the internal and external recipient ID in the POST request of a message, thus fooling the system into treating an external user as an internal one.
so they only do the check on client side. classic.
love cat -n
, when working with csv files I often use a command like this to figure out which column I need:
head -n1 file.csv | sed 's/,/\n/g' | cat -n
yes, I just found this out recently ! privacy guides have a section on this: https://www.privacyguides.org/en/dns/#android