Most users likely do not know about recall, and as the guy in the video shows, there doesn’t appear to be anything in a normal user interface showing that it is installed and configurable.
Most users likely do not know about recall, and as the guy in the video shows, there doesn’t appear to be anything in a normal user interface showing that it is installed and configurable.
If you are using a typical distro like fedora, debian or ubuntu, and you are wiping everything, you don’t really need to know anything. The installer will handle everything for you. Just delete all partitions while installing and start fresh and it should all just work.
If your install media refuses to boot for whatever reason, then you may have to disable secure boot in the system EFI/BIOS menu.
What I’m thinking. If it took that long for my server to shut down, I would just sync and force reset. Although tbh, most things are VMs now, and those reboot pretty fast and would likely not be affected much by these improvements.
A ton of people using github barely understand the different between github and git and often think they are the same thing or that github and git are somewhat related more than they really are.
If you want something similar to vim or neovim, but without all the fuss learning how to configure it and install plugins and such, you could try helix.
I would advise just creating ~/.bin
or ~/.local/share/bin
and dropping it in there. As long as you have permission to that directory, yt-dlp should be able to easily update itself.
There is a lot of development from China in the linux kernel. Also, to my knowledge there is a lot of chinese work in qemu and libvirt as well.
Yes, but that is always possible with most protocols, including imap.
Take a look a FUSE and you will see all the creative things people have done with filesystems. Or DNS, lots of fun things have been done with that also.
Tbh, I don’t think encryption matters that much for are usually public chat channels.
The private communication should be safe since i think the users will usually pin the keys for each other.
Email isn’t that secure anyway (don’t use email if your life or freedom depends on it), so I don’t see that as much as a downside.
That’s fine and easy on desktop/web browser, but for mobile devices it is not quite as easy. You would either need to use a hacked version of the app or a third party app.