You might be interested in this then, it’s an app that uses AI to auto-tag saved bookmarks: https://hoarder.app/
You might be interested in this then, it’s an app that uses AI to auto-tag saved bookmarks: https://hoarder.app/
Have you tried bookmarking things instead of leaving them open as tabs?
I’m running several used (“renewed”) enterprise SAS HDDs and enterprise SATA SSDs. They’ve been solid so far.
The HDDs came with about 30k hours each which is not bad at all, and the SSDs only had around 100 TB written out of the total 6.2 PB rating.
I’m not sure I would do used with standard consumer HDDs, they typically don’t last as long and are likely abused a lot more in a desktop PC vs a datacenter server.
As always have proper backups in place, all drives fail eventually no matter where you buy them.
IIRC it also stores your account password server side and stores your emails there too, it’s literally just webmail.
Yeah but compared to x86 setups they often are not the best choice these days.
If you add another / at the end of the URL does that solve it?
Good, game saves should have zero reason to be that huge.
Why do you trust Greasemonkey and some random script? That’s far less safe than just installing uBlock Origin.
IIRC if you’re running uBlock Origin there’s no need for Privacy Badger.
In a classic server-client situation, your clients should have AllowedIPs set to 0.0.0.0/0, ::/0 in their repecive configuration file.
Only if you want the VPN to be your default route! Many may not want this.
Bitwarden + Vaultwarden server. Or KeepassXC.
I don’t recommend using the browsers password manager.
AFAIK the user account created by default on windows will be a full privilege account, so won’t need a password to gain admin through UAC. Essentially the same as Linux where you can gain root privileges through sudo by using your own password.
But if you create an account with standard user privileges it will ask your for the password to an administrator account to gain admin. I’m not sure what the linux equivalent of this would be, denying sudo access would be too restrictive so maybe there’s an in between where you need the password to an admin user to gain sudo.
No, 2FA stops someone from getting into your account if they have the password.
I find it really hard to read for getting the information I need quickly, too much going on with too much useless info.
App and program are interchangeable terms, it doesn’t matter.
“Usually”
And stuff like this is why Linux communities get a bad rep lol. No one cares that the the term all only came along with the iPhone, it’s a common term now so get used to it.
With vaultwarden it’s very easy, just change the port map in the docker compose file on the host side. No idea how to do it with the official server stack.
It can be done if you implement a reverse proxy in front of the services.
I imagine the overlap of people who use Snapchat and people who use Firefox is pretty small, they probably see such a small amount of users with Firefox and they just decided not to support it.