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Raphael , to linux in Ran into an issue with the latest arch Linux update, how to prevent in the futur
@Raphael@lemmy.world avatar

Arch never breaks.

AbidanYre , to android in Favorite 2-factor authenticator?

A lot of people like Aegis. I just keep it all in VaultWarden because I’m lazy and it’s easier.

shortwavesurfer , to android in Favorite 2-factor authenticator?

Keepassdx for me

Trapping5341 , to android in Favorite 2-factor authenticator?

I use bitwarden for 99% of my 2FA. The rest goes into both Google Auth and Authy.

Wizza ,

Oh, didn’t know bitwarden also managed 2FA, could’ve saved the space from using authy. Is that a (somewhat) new feature or is it just me being blind and missing it?

LinkOpensChest_wav ,

It’s super hard to find. I just now learned about this too. bitwarden.com/help/authenticator-keys/

Wizza ,

Welp… time to move everything from authy to bitwarden looks like

Trapping5341 ,

It’s not as obvious as the other apps for sure and requires the premium subscription which is like 10 bucks a year. Was an instant buy for me when I switched over. When you auto fill a login it will automatically copy your 2FA key to quick paste into the box. I love it.

Wizza ,

That does sounds nice, but on the other hand… i do like free stuff, instead of paying for subscriptions…

Trapping5341 ,

Yeah I don’t disagree but $10 a year is well worth it imo. Plus it keeps all your passwords and 2FA in one easy place.

ASK_ME_ABOUT_LOOM ,

This is the way to go! Bitwarden’s authenticator is just so smoothly integrated into the login process - Ctrl-Shift-L to login, them Ctrl-V to paste the code.

I use yubikeys wherever they’re available and I use Aegis for the rare TOTP I don’t store in Bitwarden.

Trapping5341 ,

Been looking into getting a yubikey recently and just can’t bring myself to bite the bullet.

ASK_ME_ABOUT_LOOM , (edited )

If you can catch a good sale, they’re more affordable .I picked up two for about US$45 for their “May the Fourth” one-day sale in 2022.

Trapping5341 ,

Now that’s a price I can get behind. I think they are $55 for 1 of the series 5 right now. I debated just getting a security key version for $25 but I know I’ll just end up getting the higher tier later because I don’t really understand them and how they work.

dantheclamman OP ,
@dantheclamman@lemmy.world avatar

So you store the TOTP for Bitwarden in one of the other apps?

Trapping5341 ,

Both actually because Bitwarden is to important to me to trust one service lol

floppy ,
@floppy@rabbitea.rs avatar

I use Bitwarden for 2FA and the Bitwarden TOTP is in Aegis (I switched there from Authy after seeing a mention of it yesterday - never liked that it's near impossible to get the tokens back out of Authy, but Bitwarden is the only thing I use it for). Actually the Bitwarden code is in Bitwarden too 😉.

I don't particularly like that the passwords and TOTP are stored together, but it makes things much more convenient.

revanite ,

I use bitwarden for all but it’s protected by a yubikey.

Trapping5341 ,

Ironically Bitwarden is why I want a Yubikey

m , to selfhosted in Advice/poll on switching away from Ubuntu for my VM host.
@m@tthi.as avatar

I just swapped from Ubuntu to Debian but I don’t use VMs - only containers. I back my files up directly to B2 using autorestic, also running in a container that is scheduled by… another container (chadburn).

No need for any VMs in my house. I honestly can’t see the point of them when containers exist.

SeeJayEmm OP ,
@SeeJayEmm@lemmy.procrastinati.org avatar

Eh, to each their own. In fairness, some iteration of my current setup has existed for many years and I’ve only just get my feet wet with containers in the last month.

m ,
@m@tthi.as avatar

@SeeJayEmm I totally get it. Learning curves can be brutal.

TrenchcoatFullofBats ,

Just an FYI to OP: If you’re looking to run docker containers, you should know that Proxmox specifically does NOT support running docker in an LXC, as there is a very good chance that stuff will break when you upgrade. You should really only run docker containers in VMs with Proxmox.

Proxmox Staff:

Just for completeness sake - We don’t recommend running docker inside of a container (precisely because it causes issues upon upgrades of Kernel, LXC, Storage packages) - I would install docker inside of a Qemu VM as this has fewer interaction with the host system and is known to run far more stable.

donut4ever , to youshouldknow in YSK: How to Budget
@donut4ever@lemmy.world avatar

Hi me. Nice to finally meet you. I’ve lived off of $40k a year at my previous job. Family of 4, we have a house and two cars. Never been late on any payment I have. Credit is 800 now. People came to my last job to buy shit, they sign up for credit cards and their incomes are $80k+ and they always complained about being “broke” while buying shit they didn’t need. Lol.

Coeus , to android in What's your favourite keyboard app? ⌨️

I use Gboard because it just works. I would like to move to a FOSS keyboard but every one I’ve tried become frustrating to use.

omarciddo ,

Yep. Much as I hate to say it, GBoard just feels good in a way that none of the other major swipe keyboards have for me.

kratoz29 ,

Same, I scrolled too far to find another gboard user lol.

AMillionMonkeys ,
@AMillionMonkeys@lemmy.world avatar

If you just want to distance yourself from Google, give OpenBoard a try. It’s GBoard without the G. It’s been working just the same for me, except for some reason it spontaneously decided to stop automatically capitalizing “I”.

Coeus ,

I’m replying with open board, let’s see how it does.

gogosempai ,
@gogosempai@programming.dev avatar

There’s a fork of OpenBoard that enables Glide typing, in case you’re in interested in that:

github.com/erkserkserks/openboard

gringo_dingo ,

Thank you for that recommendation. Was using AnySoftKeyboard for ages and got very frustrated with autocorrect and space bar position. Now, I can ditch it for something that works.

BenderFender ,

I agree. I’ve tried so many FOSS keyboards and no matter how hard I try, I just have to go back to gboard. It’s wild how hard it is to find a good keyboard. I can’t even use the stock Samsung one anymore

FarLine99 ,

GBoard without internet access is good compromise for me.

shertson , to selfhosted in Advice/poll on switching away from Ubuntu for my VM host.
@shertson@lemmy.world avatar

I’ll add my voice to the chorus and recommend Proxmox. I’ve never tried xcp-ng; it looks nice and I’m interested, but Proxmox has worked well for me.

infamousbelgian , to fediverse in Can I use the same domain name for Lemmy and Mastodon?

By no means an expert but how do you want to set it up? Different subdomains or folders?

I think subdomains are actual FQDN’s and will not cause issues. Folders might be an interesting experiment.

manitcor ,
@manitcor@lemmy.intai.tech avatar

pretty sure federation protocol is looking for <NAME>:<PORT>

i haven’t seen instances use a sub-directory

pgetsos , to android in What's your favourite keyboard app? ⌨️
@pgetsos@kbin.social avatar

I love Multiling, but unfortunately it is not actively supported anymore

Super customisable, helpful for a Colemak user like, and shortcuts for select all, copy, paste etc in ALL text inputs even if they blocked such things. Also many ways to customize text and things like special symbols etc

manitcor , to fediverse in Can I use the same domain name for Lemmy and Mastodon?
@manitcor@lemmy.intai.tech avatar

yes you can use the same domain, but you may need different subdomains for everything to work happily.

albsen , to technology in Best Linux laptop for 2023

If your OK with arm I’d say the macbooks and especially the macbook air are ready with asahi for daily use. I’m personally considering getting to run linux on as daily driver.

ede OP ,

That’s an interesting point. I could buy my wife a new Air and update her M1 to run Linux. Thanks for the suggestion!

code ,
@code@lemmy.mayes.io avatar

This is where i am leaning too

jcarax ,

Check the status of Asahi Linux, they’re making a lot of progress on Apple silicon, but it’s very early. I wouldn’t recommend it, at this point.

Do you actually need 64GB of RAM? The Thinkpad T16 AMD would be a good choice, but the T14s AMD has just stupidly low fan noise in Notebookcheck’s review. You definitely want to focus on AMD, Intel’s efficiency is… not great right now. As an added benefit, you get AMD graphics from the APU, so none of the Nvidia driver fuckery, and better performance than Intel.

Personally, I’m waiting for the T14s Gen 4 AMD. The 7840u is zen 4, GCN 3, and TSMC 4nm over the 6850u’s zen 3, GCN2, and TSMC 6nm. The T14 and T16 just hit Lenovo’s model database ‘psref’ earlier this week, so I’d expect them out in the next couple months. The T14s hasn’t been seen yet, I’d guess it hits psref in the next couple weeks. But, I’m prepared to wait into Q4, if need be, and some think I will be.

ede OP ,

Yeah, the RAM is a hard requirement. I’d like more if I could. My desktop is AMD so I’m not against using them at all if it makes sense to do so. I’ve also enjoyed Lenovo in the past but couldn’t find a well enough equipped unit for my liking.

spartanatreyu ,
@spartanatreyu@programming.dev avatar

What are you doing that makes having 64gb ram useful?

ede OP ,

I develop software and do a lot of PoC with VMs and containers.

areyouevenreal ,

They already answered this:

I’m in DevSecOps, and do a lot of heavy development and testing, as well as PoCs. Ideally, I’d have 128GB of RAM but laptops aren’t quite there yet. The HD is a Samsung SSD.

spartanatreyu ,
@spartanatreyu@programming.dev avatar

I can’t see your comment about heavy dev and testing.

I’m curious about what exactly is chewing up that much RAM. Do you have a ridiculous amount of containers running? Or a big ram disk or something?

areyouevenreal ,

It’s not my comment. You are talking to the completely wrong person. Go look at their comments.

jcarax ,

Ah, I think to get 64GB from a Thinkpad you’d have to move up to a P series, and even the P16s and P14s that are based on the T16 and T14 will be significantly warmer and louder than those others. They’re very much tuned for performance. Unfortunately, Lenovo is soldering RAM far more on their AMD models than the Intel models, so you won’t be able to run above spec.

boonhet ,

Asahi is kinda unfinished, you’d need to run MacOS on it to get that sweet 10-25hour battery life probably. Many things don’t work yet either.

Im_old , to linux in Internet issues

You can look (from a terminal) with lsusb what linux thinks it is. With that info you can probably find an open source driver from your windows side, download it and access it from linux (and so install it). Good luck, you’ll earn a lot!

SkipWapPallyPap OP ,

It seems like everything I have found needs to be opened with some package downloaded through the terminal and I can’t access them without internet. I will keep looking for a run and done thing.

shertson , to linux in Internet issues
@shertson@lemmy.world avatar

If there are drivers available for download, use Windows or another computer to save to a USB drive, then install them in Linux. It’s been a long time since I’ve had to do that.

SkipWapPallyPap OP ,

I Found drivers but the install pdf that came with them needed me to install gcc. Since I don’t have internet I couldn’t do that.

shertson ,
@shertson@lemmy.world avatar

It’s been a while since I have had to do it, but it is possible to download all the deb/rpm packages to the USB drive under windows. It’ll be a manual process to identify which will be required.

You might be better off finding CD images for the package repository and installing packages from there.

just_anon , to linux in Internet issues

me more adapter t2u ,what revision is it? V3? And what version of ubuntu

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