The fact that the ccc uses matrix as their official chat “app” doesn’t imply that it is inherently insecure I would say.
The fact that the ccc uses matrix as their official chat “app” doesn’t imply that it is inherently insecure I would say.
Try this one
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.spocky.projengmenu&hl=de&gl=US
Been using it for a year now, really happy with it.
Yup, that’s it, at least from my understanding.
My advice is try using existing documents with Libre office. You can install it on windows as well.
I use Linux for over twenty years now and installed windows on a vm last week to Wirte my resume. Libre office is fine, you run into problems when opening and editing existing ms office documents. At least that is my experience.
But give Libre office on windows a shot, see if you like it.
Care to back up the last statement about last pass being the most secure? I’m having a really hard time seeing lastpass as more secure than a local only password manager like keepass or KeePassXC.
Honestly, this reads like a PR post.
https://github.com/toverainc/willow
They even have a dedicated piece of hardware for it.
Look into vlan.
Basically allows you to have different subnets rubbing on a physical network card.
It is possible what you want to do and not that complicated.
Man, Ryan Reynolds the lawyer is really entertaining. Thanks for posting the video, I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Thanks for the link, that was an interesting read!
Reolink ist the way to go. I think only the battery powered ones don’t have onvif. Otherwise the poe cameras all support onvif and are generally of very good quality. Plug it in and of you go. EDIT: Forgot to mention: You can configure the camera via the web interface, so no need for an app. I’m using the 820 at the moment, but I’m planning to get the new trackmix camera, these look really good.
It is absolutely possible to dual boot from a single harddrive. Don’t know about fedora, but the Ubuntu installer has taken care of that for ages now. Yes, it can fuck your windows install initially, but that is normally reversible.
If you don’t know, a computer uses so called partitions and not the hard drive directly. Think of them as folders. Normally you have one partition which holds the bootloader information (one or two OS, or more) and then a partition for each OS. A little Programm after Turning on the computer let’s you choose which OS you want to boot.
A lone Linux installation often has three partitions on one harddrive. One boot Partition, one for the OS and one for the home directory of all users. This way you can reinstall the OS without loosing your home directory.
Thanks. This definitely goes onto the pile of things I’ll build at the new house.
Reolink has always been a good choice. Very good hardware for the price and they support onvif on most devices, which you can then use however you like.