Yes, that’s how syndromes work. Having one or two of these things is expected. Having half of them isn’t.
Yes, that’s how syndromes work. Having one or two of these things is expected. Having half of them isn’t.
I think that’s the nicest “LMGTFY” kind of response I’ve seen. Kudos to you, my friend.
At this point it’s hardly the law and the constitution. These are just unpredictable whims of the people in power.
It’s too hard to change anything if one believes in laws, rules and the general idea of a fair justice. They don’t have this limitation.
One of the problems that annoyed me in the past is the complexity and ambiguity of deleting an email over IMAP. Depending on whether it’s the last label of the deleted email, deleting an email from a label’s directory either removes a label from this email, or actually deletes the email.
In other words, ohmage is an homage to amperage.
Considering labels are very non-standard, which caused trouble over IMAP since forever, I wouldn’t count on that part.
Any device made according to the spec. So mostly “not Nintendo Switch”.
A cheap Chinese bluetooth speaker. I bought it due to its great price without any specific idea how to utilize it. Years later I ended up in relatively cramped conditions without the hi-fi equipment I used previously, using this bluetooth speaker as my main audio device for long months.
Can you summarize this in a vertical video? I stopped reading after the third word, I’m here for memes, not to read a damned book!
As a non-native English speaker, I still have no idea why this specific phrase is so significant and at this point I’m afraid to ask.
While I agree with you in general, let’s not pretend the implication isn’t obvious. Reddit just doesn’t like that implication, and that’s telling us a lot about Reddit.
Do you have more of these?
Mostly Ubuntu. And… I think it’s just Ubuntu.
When Tim fucking Sweeney calls you out on your bullshit, you know you’re a special kind of piece of shit.
Either multiple different keychains or even you can have no keychain-like application in your system at all.
The WiFi passwords are usually stored in /etc/NetworkManager
as plain files. Granted, they are not accessible directly by non-root users as they are being managed by the NetworkManager daemon, but there is nothing generic for such a thing. Signal rolling a similar daemon for itself would be an overkill. The big desktop environments (GNOME, KDE…) usually have their own keychain-like programs that the programs provided by these environments use, but that only solves this problem for the users of these specific environments.
To me it’s perfectly expected the Signal encryption keys are readable by my user account.
There is no single keychain on Linux, and supposedly on Windows too. Signal would need to either support a few dozens of password managers or require a specific one, both options terrible in their own way. This isn’t something that can be done without making broad assumptions about the user’s system.
So basically Arch?
I presume you’re volunteering to pay OP’s bills? And let’s not forget about the great activism prospects homeless people have.
OP, survive. Only once you survive, you can change things for the better.