The part that’s infuriating isn’t the phrase. Its a good phrase when used correctly. It’s annoying that your friend is explicitly hating on your personal opinion after stating they want to respect your difference of opinion.
People have different opinions. One person’s “ew” is a other person’s “oooh.” So never yuck someone else’s yum.
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I've seen in this thread:
Fewer Letters | More Letters ---|--- DNS | Domain Name Service/System NUC | Next Unit of Computing brand of Intel small computers PiHole | Network-wide ad-blocker (DNS sinkhole) RPi | Raspberry Pi brand of SBC SBC | Single-Board Computer
3 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 10 acronyms.
Plus having to basically rely on a built-in app database/store to easily install apps
Someone else has mentioned that all GUI ‘stores’ suck, and in my experience that’s true. I usually find things either from Google, suggestions, or apt search.
Kinda stinks to me, and not being able to simply download an installer from a website.
I also thought I might mention that standalone Linux executables do exist, I believe ookla speedtest publish one, and additionally AppImages are really cool in that it’s a container the app runs in that you can just double click.
and having the program, whatever program, up and running reliably within a minute
I’ve only had issues with this when I’ve done something dodgy and I know that I’ve done it, when it’s an app in the middle of development, or snap packages. Anything installed using the distro’s repo, Flatpak, or AppImage, has always worked. I still use Windows for study, and I’m pretty sure it takes longer on Windows to go from download to app running.
‘No one’s spying on me, I’m not interesting’ is more pernicious than Nothing to Hide. Most adults can kind of sense the idiocy of the latter refrain. But ask the utterer why advertising is a trillion-dollar industry if their attitudes and behaviours aren’t interesting, or why a data broking industry even exists, and you’ll typically be asked ‘why care?’
What’s harder to work out is whether the utterance is a genuine failure to comprehend the nature of surveillance capitalism, or a grasping denial of its impact, as though they’re only 80 per cent convinced of their footprint’s worthlessness. It’s difficult to convince someone to turn down their data faucet when they barely acknowledge the faucet’s existence to start with.
My guess is that most people, like you said, fail to grasp surveillance capitalism. They have zero idea of how computers or the internet works, and think that billion dollar companies aren’t connecting data points on their browsing habits to sell them stuff, or even worse, make their findings known to other 3rd parties like insurance companies and scammers. People just literally have no clue. Most people couldn’t even be bothered to educate themselves about what Edward Snowden was talking about.
You’re all awesome. So much feedback for me to work with.
I’d say the vast majority are recommending Bitwarden (or Vaultwarden should I want to self host), with lots of shoutouts for 1Password as well. Honourable mentions for KeePass as well as a few others.
I’ll continue to run Bitwarden in parallel to 1Password for a little while longer to see if I prefer one over the other. I’ll definitely look into self hosting it as well, although I don’t currently have a domain name so would either have to get one or do the slightly more convoluted method of getting self-signed certificates.
Thanks all for taking the time to indulge me — very much appreciated.
Tags on Mastodon cause a post to appear on Lemmy? That sounds great, but I can’t find any documentation or anything about that. Do you have a link? Does it really work?
I’ll second this for the most part. Once you get the basic framework of a docker host set up it’s pretty simple with only a couple containers holding it up so if you can understand the workings of virtual machines/containers it’s pretty ‘easy’ to set up. That said, an ugly XSS vulnerability has been out there causing problems and as a whole it’s very much an unpolished product so there’s a lot of work in understanding ‘why the heck is it doing this now??’ things.
I’ll recommend my own instance at endlesstalk.org. There you can create a community, if you want. lemm.ee or sh.itjust.works might also allow creating of new communities, but I haven’t checked.
It looks like you’re on lemmy.world. That instance let’s you create communities. If you’re viewing the site in your browser, tap the hamburger menu on the top right (3 horizontal lines) and select “Create Community”.
It looks like you’re on lemmy.world. That instance let’s you create communities. If you’re viewing the site in your browser, tap the hamburger menu on the top right (3 horizontal lines) and select “Create Community”.
In terms of integrating with website stuff, it is a lot better, KeePass wasn’t designed to be web first. In fact, the vast majority of password managers aim to be used on the web. KeePass was never designed for that job. It’s just an application to store passwords. KeePass has one feature though that not many other password managers can do, Auto-Type. Auto-Type can type your credentials into other applications. I work in IT and have many passwords for different systems and applications. I’m willing to bet I use Auto-Type about a hundred times a day to type my passwords for me. Bitwarden can’t do this.
Whilst the majority of my passwords at home are within the browser, there are applications that I wish it could type into for me. For example Steam, VeraCrypt, Epic Launcher etc.
Basically, I use Bitwarden at home but at work I use KeePass. KeePassXC is also worth looking at if you like KeePass.
What do you mean exactly by “not web first?” I use it, and aside from not being able to detect the browser tab name without using the extension, I don’t really see anything that would be missing
Most password managers are built around password management for the web. KeePass isn’t like that, it’s a feature-rich password manager but doesn’t concentrate on managing web passwords like other password managers do.
I have a framework 12th gen. It’s great. Fantastic build quality and when I want to upgrade, I don’t need a whole new laptop, just the necessary internal components. I can even switch to AMD!
Coreboot is cool, and I can’t wait to see the new system76 laptop that is being built in-house, but until that comes out, I don’t think I would ever consider the current lineup of system76 computers.
My main motivations are repairability, upgradability, and specificity of components, and system76 just doesn’t offer that. They don’t tell you what ram or SSD models go into your laptop, they don’t sell replacement parts, and there is no upgrade path.
I’m pretty sure if you wanted to know more they’d tell you. System76 supports the right to repair, although their Laptops are probably not as easy to repair as a Framework.
I want to know on the purchase page what exactly is going into my laptop, I want to easily be able to purchase replacement parts from a catalog of in-stock components, and I want documentation for repairs and replacements.
I believe that they want to, but that laptop isn’t available yet, and it would be the first example of something like that from them, so I’ll wait until they produce a second generation of it to recommend to people.
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