Since I’m already using Bitwarden, generating and storing passwords is easy. I use my name as the username, though that user doesn’t have admin privileges.
Since I’m already using Bitwarden, generating and storing passwords is easy. I use my name as the username, though that user doesn’t have admin privileges.
I’m not surprised. A cube can’t be round. That’s an obvious design flaw.
I don’t understand what isn’t clear here?
Why not? Why should I use Apache instead of Nginx? I don’t know about Caddy, Nginx is simple enough not to care about simpler solutions. But in general, I know Nginx and it does the job.
When you own a domain name, you own it forever. You don’t depend on the third party, they can’t take it away from you.
Really? You can lose your domain for various reasons, that is not impossible.
From my understanding my phone should be unlockable, but I have no expertise when it comes to custom Android builds. Like, how do I know they are safe and don’t come with some malware?
If only there was what to install. It’s crazy that I have to essentially throw away a perfectly capable device because the manufacturer doesn’t provide updates anymore. That if I want security updates.
Laughs in Galaxy S8 where the fingerprint scanner only works if all planets are properly aligned which happens only once in 28 years.
Didn’t I answer this question in my previous reply?
When it comes to preserving my data? Yes. Though I’d be concerned about privacy of my diary too, I get your point. Public code is one thing, but personal notes is another.
I agree. I was thinking about using different services for different tasks instead of putting everything into the same basket. I’m not self-hosting an email server either.
That’s true. But as we were speaking about an external service (Proton), I was thinking about diversification. I use Proton for emails, but I don’t use Proton Pass opting for another external password manager.
Should we do that though? I’m choosing between playing PS5 and configuring my home server. I’m not being paid for either of that. But skills I obtain while tinkering with the server actually help me with some tasks at work.
I like the idea, but I don’t like that everything is tied to a single account. If it’s compromised so are your emails, calendar, contacts, files, and passwords. But the service is good enough to replace Google, and choosing between the two, I’d choose Proton.
That’s what I was thinking too. Thank you!
Yep, VPN makes it easier to access different services. Connect once, open anything you want in the local service. But I can set up WG without a VPS. To me that extra layer seems unnecessary.
Quite often I see replies like “don’t open ports, use tailscale”. Maybe they mix different reasons and solutions, confusing people like me :D
0% of Rust smh