Depends on your religion, I guess.
Runterwählen ist kein Gegenargument.
[Verifying my cryptographic key: openpgp4fpr:941D456ED3A38A3B1DBEAB2BC8A2CCD4F1AE5C21]
Depends on your religion, I guess.
Thank you, that helps me a lot. :-)
Are the stairs ok?
There’s only one way to find out… (no, seriously, good catch!)
Well, a slightly less flippant answer: I’m seriously interested in finding out how an iPhone behaves when it falls. I’m very clumsy and in the 15+ years I’ve been using smartphones, I’ve dropped one more than once in such an annoying way that I’ve had to buy a new one.
Beyond the pure entertainment value of these videos - comparable perhaps to monster truck shows (‘haha look, the car is flat!’) - they are definitely a recommendation to buy for people like me.
If mankind could agree on what is entertaining and what is not, the charts would be much more enjoyable. :-)
I’m sure it’s not even his own money.
It is entertaining.
Probably not.
Now if it supported org files too…
TIL: Dillo+. Thank you!
Browsers: Vivaldi on most desktops, NetSurf on 9front, Vivaldi on mobile, w3m on the command-line.
Search engines: Kagi, Brave.
There is no difference other than a shiny logo and a “contract” that promises you that the random stranger will take care. I promise that I will take care too.
If you still think there is a relevant difference, please tell me. To me, it looks like you don’t fully understand what a password manager stored on other people’s computers does.
A cloud password manager is a database with your passwords hosted on a stranger’s computer. Why wouldn’t I be just as trustworthy as any other stranger on the internet?
My questions are to those of you who self-host, firstly: why?
Would you give me your password database? I promise to encrypt it!
They still are not!
Lebanon is not in Israel. Not. Their. Land.
Ah, the joys of using “standard” software.
Just be polite.