[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 46 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I use Bitwarden for passwords. Just works so well.

KeepassXC and KeePassium for TOTP codes. I keep the database in the cloud but sync a key with Syncthing that’s needed to unlock the database on the devices themselves.

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 36 points 9 months ago

While good, not great that they were threatened in the first place.

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 45 points 10 months ago

It’s literally a pirate themed company. Don’t be surprised.

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 42 points 10 months ago

The owner must immediately remove road salt? The rust belt is nothing but 3 piles of road salt in a trench coat for half the year…

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 37 points 11 months ago

We’re in the early hype phase of a new innovation fad. It’ll die down and then we’ll find out what it’s ACTUALLY useful for.

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 46 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

AFAIK Libreoffice only uses Java for limited things and isn’t a requirement.

Pretty sure it’s mostly C++

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 40 points 1 year ago

It’s not tinfoil at all.

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 42 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Audiologist here.

We treat it like a medical emergency. Reason being if it is a sudden sensorineural loss then they would start you on Prednisone asap. It may help to preserve your hearing.

We think it needs started within a few weeks (at the very most) but earlier is probably better.

That being said, it might not be a sudden sensorineural loss. A hearing test would tell you.

In my experience having seen many actual sudden sensorineural losses over the years, the treatment doesn’t necessarily help in many cases. It’s a last ditch effort really to preserve what we can. Personally, I would probably just wait for morning, but I would tell a patient to go immediately.

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 46 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Everything should be date-based name releases.

If it’s released April, 2023 it should be 23.04 or similar.

Other schemes are arbitrary.

Change my mind.

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 42 points 1 year ago
[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 34 points 1 year ago

Sure. Except you gain universal compatibility for all distros that have flatpak and aren’t building all the different package formats. Makes it much more attractive for actual developers to package since it’s only done once.

There’s no right answer here, but there are definite benefits.

I’ve had many little issues since I moved to Linux years ago, most of which would never have been an issue if flatpaks were there at the time. My experience has been better with them.

[-] ebits21@lemmy.ca 39 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I have a ton of flatpaks which means packages are shared between them, so no it’s not lazy or a copy of the whole system. It makes a ton of sense for stability.

Updates are diff’s so downloading and updating is fast. Not entire packages.

Making every package work with only a certain version of a dependency and hoping it is stable doesn’t make a lot of sense.

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ebits21

joined 2 years ago