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Syncthing, a peer to peer file synchronize that basically everyone needs, they just don’t know it.
Syncthing, a peer to peer file synchronize that basically everyone needs, they just don’t know it.
I run syncthing with my own relay and I trust that setup. Owning me through syncthing would basically require backdooring the software, something that’d be likely to go noticed by the syncthing community.
Rustdesk is a backdoor by functionality and it’s already using infra I don’t control. I don’t feel comfortable using that.
It’s literally a third-party service that let’s others control your desktop. Doesn’t matter how FOSS the clients and end servers are, one also needs to trust the intermediate servers. If those running them are caught dishonest about which country they’re located, the trust evaporates. China or not.
Whenever you get your podcasts, is it’s not RSS, it’s not podcasts.
Yeah, just don’t. Allowing to code in anything other than English is a disservice, plain and simple.
Inb4, I’m not being US-centric, Latin ain’t even my native alphabet.
Doesn’t work if it’s invisible.
Homoglyphs? Invisible text? Bidirectional text? Just highlight every line that goes beyond ASCII with yellow warning colors and require to vet it. Maybe make localization data an exception.
IMO NUCs are wonderful for a homelab beginner for 1. the vPro/AMT capability (that you’re skipping on for some reason) 2. the ability to go passive with aftermarket cases. If neither if that interests you, they’re… not much better than an equivalent laptop?
Syncthing is the one, I could probably replace any one but this one.
Fruit trees. There’s a ton of them.
I’m old enough to remember previous native tab grouping.