

Now THAT’S some mental gymnastics!
👨💻 Passionate PHP developer 🐧 Linux junkie 🖥️ Avid PC gamer ☕ Coffee aficionado 👫 Dedicated husband 👨👧👦 Proud father of two
Now THAT’S some mental gymnastics!
What does this even mean?
Yup, seems mostly like a fear of the unknown.
As posted in another thread already…
There’s nothing wrong with Secure Boot and enabling it can prevent a small subset of attack vectors with no real downsides. That being said, the things Secure Boot does protect against aren’t likely to be an issue for most users but it’s nothing to be afraid of.
As I already said in another thread…
There’s nothing wrong with Secure Boot and enabling it can prevent a small subset of attack vectors with no real downsides. That being said, the things Secure Boot does protect against aren’t likely to be an issue for most users but it’s nothing to be afraid of.
There’s nothing wrong with Secure Boot and enabling it can prevent a small subset of attack vectors with no real downsides. That being said, the things Secure Boot does protect against aren’t likely to be an issue for most users but it’s nothing to be afraid of.
This looks like exactly what I’ve been searching for. Will try it out when I’m home.
I connect my primary and backup servers on 10G directly via a crossover cable for transferring ZFS snapshots. No actual 10G switches or anything at the moment but if I add any more servers I need to back up I’ll probably get a small 10G switch to put in between.
Am I missing something?
No and, in fact, this was (and still is) a selling point of Git over the alternatives (e.g. Subversion) available at the time that required you to “check out” some code and no one else could check out/modify that code while you had it checked out.
😏
I’d much rather praise them when they do something well, but this is so hard to spot when just reading over committed code. All the obstacles they cleared are not visible in there.
This is SO true and exactly why code reviews always feel like a beat down (even when they’re not). There’s no visibility into the truly good work that’s already been done.
I’d argue this is a wash. Linux is more convenient in many ways but Windows is in others.
Joke’s on you, I play Dota.
Everything old is new again.
Pointless, no. Many (but yes, not all) extensions are still available to use in VSCodium.
Mullvad got rid of their port forwarding.
So did IVPN. Use Proton VPN now.
“all your vscode extensions still work fine” is definitely not true. Sure a vast majority of them probably do, but certainly not all of them.
I still prefer it over full VS Code though.
Directory Lister is a perfect fit for this. Docker instructions here.
Disclaimer: I am the author of Directory Lister. Feel free to reach out with questions.