It’s because of what ctrl+c does in most terminals
KulliRaivo
It’s because of what ctrl+c does in most terminals
I guess a downside is having to fiddle with it, allowing stuff you want to get through. Sometimes it blocks stuff you don’t want blocked
How is that a good example of insecurity of any kind?
I didn’t imply you wanted it
Well it’s not employees want the corporations to have unionized, but they just have less power to do anything about it
It’s just as stupid as you fear. Music stops when you close your screen.
Great music player, Google.
The bands you loved at 15-17 are probably the bands that you’ll love forever.
Thank god that wasn’t the case. Listened to some awful shit as a kid
it’s pretty easy to type long commands with little typing
Big if true
I wonder if you can be a madlad and symlink your bash-aliases to a synced file.
You couldn’t even work if you made a few longer commonly used commands convenient aliases? Well alright.
I can’t imagine how you feel about bash scripts lol.
Right but I don’t have to worry about my own computer is what I mean. Can’t do anything about bank or government computers anyway.
I’m not going to be as worried that my personal stuff is getting hacked if it requires someone to actually visit me at home lol
Thanks. I read the article but (from my reading) they left out the most important part out: how it spreads and infects a machine. Sometimes they make a huge deal about a Linux backdoor and then it’s revealed right at the end (if at all) that it requires local access. Wah whaa. Now I have to scan every article to see what the actual method is.
The article answers your question
Newspapers had those things where you could chat by sending in mail and having a nickname and shit.
Private platform. That was the argument before Elon took over, so I guess same works (or doesn’t) here.
KDE and GNOME want to be full suites of software that offer a coherent look and whatnot.
This release KDE has actually focused on improving and fixing more than just adding features