I do that too, I have my own server in my basement for storage
programmer_belch
Best password manager is offline password manager.
KeepassXC makes a file with the passwords that is encrypted, sharing this file with a server is more secure than letting the server manage your passwords
I don't think coding in C is basic stuff, depending on the IDE, you can learn about using the terminal, compilers and if the course gets far, memory allocation, a really important tool in Linux programs.
I'm going with the classic:
Pringles can
Gloves
Sponge
"Sorry, your colony didn't pay the oxygen fee so we sealed all connections to other colonies"
I hope when we get to Mars we are over the whole car idea and can start building train and path tracks instead of doing suburb 2 electric bogaloo
The only way to damage the big companies is with proportional fines.
You destroy the environment? 50% of your income gained in every country goes to those countries. I don't know why this isn't being advocated anywhere because measuring income is easy, the company has to do taxes and if they don't, 75% fine with the profits correctly calculated.
Just bleed them dry.
How I wish a chat privacy law could be passed to make more difficult to continue eroding our rights.
None of the packages I compile from source are essential to my working system. I have a private chatbot to test, some emulators and dsda-doom.
Every one of those programs can be one or two versions obsolete and it won't make a difference.
I just complie from source some lightweight programs that are too niche for repositories. I am in no way advocating for full source compilation of every program in your system, that's a security and usage nightmare. Flatpack does have its use for sandboxing an environment. I personally use it for windows applications in bottles.
Yes, it would depend on your flatpack usage. For me I only have like 5 programs compiled from source and one flatpack (bottles) because of the sandboxing
Cool Gemini Home Entertainment reference