incoming fascists … will handle VPNs
Worst comes to worst, they’ll never take my precious ssh -D
.
incoming fascists … will handle VPNs
Worst comes to worst, they’ll never take my precious ssh -D
.
In most Lemmy clients, the ! makes it a link, e.g. !196@lemmy.world. You can also do something similar with users, e.g. @aeiou_ckr@lemmy.world. Note that these links stay on your native instance (e.g. if I linked to !196@lemmy.blahaj.zone it’d still open in lemmy.world for you), but Voyager’s autocomplete makes a normal link (e.g. !196@lemmy.blahaj.zone) that is not instance-independent.
How does that even work?
I thought it was Alt+V. Might be shell-dependent?
Not if you’re a Bash programmer ·υ·
Post your most recently saved video.
It probably opened it in ${VISUAL:-${EDITOR:-vim}}
; usually setting one of those variables in e.g. bashrc will avoid future vim.
I’m worried about relying on remote servers for random numbers, especially for cryptographic purposes. There’s no way to verify that you aren’t the only person with access to those numbers, and it’s fairly difficult even as the sysadmin to ensure that they’re logged nowhere.
not a photos community
reference to reddit
Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt
Most people in fursuits seem to be non-facultative bipeds, so that advantage wouldn’t be of much help.
OP’s mom*
You can still just hide the password field upon typing an SSO email address — iirc Atlassian does this.
tailscale/
Windows actually has two types of symlinks:
mklink
.Probably, someone managed to create a real symlink in their OneDrive folder, and since OneDrive probably doesn’t check for symlinks it blindly copied all the files to the cloud.
Take all this with a grain of salt — I’m not a Microsoft developer, and it’s been a while since I last used Windows.