You wouldn’t download a car‽
Software developer interested into security and sustainability.
You wouldn’t download a car‽
Cirrus for weather, Currencies for, well, currency conversion, LavSeeker for searching public toilets.
All are available on F-Droid.
Try disabling hardware acceleration
But the aerosols would also amplify the green house effect right?
Mount the drive with the user or group as plex. See mount options uid and gid. You can also set precise permissions on the mount point (using options at mount time) to let plex access a subdirectory.
Refactor package structure
Files could be decrypted by the end user. The OS itself could remain unencrypted.
You could try organic maps.
We growing wiser, or are we just growing tall?
Nginx is pretty easy to set up. Look up “nginx virtual hosts”. You might want to use certbot/acme if you don’t have SSL certificates for your domain names. You need either a wildcard certificate (*.example.com), a certificate with SAN (Subject Alternative Name) containing the second subdomain, or two certificates (one for each subdomain). Note that subdomains can be found more easily than path based websites, if you allow connections from the whole WAN.
Try this:
for file in ./*
do
echo "$file"
done
To do some substitution operation om the filename you can use Bash Parameter Expansion.
Rumors say there are some platforms selling grow-kits including everything needed to get started. In Europe, people recommend some platform starting with Zam and ending with nesia, which supposedly provide a variety of kits.
You can also find plenty of resources online to start from scratch. The easiest seems to be the uncle bens method.
If i understand correctly, whataboutism is used to burry a statement without any solid counter-argument. The accusation of it burries the whataboutism’s argument, which could be valid nonetheless.
I think it helps to cool the drink and inot only satisfactory.
But the article of the DMA says that the gatekeeper shall not prevent the business user to serve their product using other conditions than those of the gatekeeper’s platform. I think that would include Apple’s publishing guidelines.
Then it may be a token stealer.
I don’t think that browsers do that. There is HSTS but I think that it only checks if the connection is using TLS.