thevoiceofra

joined 2 years ago
[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 90 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (4 children)

>put messages into someone else's system

>don't read privacy policy

>someone else uses your messages

surprisedpikatchu.jpg

[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Good. I've only had bad experience with Wallet. Tried to use it, added a card. Some time later I tried opening it and it was constantly crashing. It was like that for few weeks. I've tried upgrading, downgrading - the same. This is supposed to be a critical app. I've uninstalled and I'm never going to try it again.

[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

So it's still an opt-in. You can disable play protect and bypass the tool.

[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 1 points 2 years ago
[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 13 points 2 years ago (2 children)

For those you'd need to scan your dick in UK.

[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 11 points 2 years ago

Haskell packages are dynamically build in arch repos, so they're a huge mess. Use this instead: https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/pandoc-bin

[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

But why typescript? Why not nickel or any other better suited functional lazy language with types?

[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 21 points 2 years ago (3 children)
[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 0 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

If you're just reading configs then yeah, it's superior. If you're maintaining big complex configurations, possibly for multiple machines, you need something to reduce boilerplate. Jsonnet, nickel or nix are excellent here. So the best way is to use one of those, generate yaml, and deploy. Saves you a lot of headaches but it's one more moving thing in your pipeline which can break.

[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz -5 points 2 years ago (6 children)

Interesting. But what If I'm not using CoreOS? Also RedHat fucked up by using YAML for configuration.

[–] thevoiceofra@mander.xyz 6 points 2 years ago

That's the video in this post

 

Long range (LoRa) mesh networks are interesting alternatives to communication, especially when state actors are blocking internet access for various reasons.

More details about meshtastic: https://meshtastic.org/

About its current state of encryption: https://meshtastic.org/docs/overview/encryption

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