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How would that help?
How would that help?
They were when the name was made, but due to changes in the manufacturing process, they aren’t anymore. The name stuck, though.
https://www.popsci.com/two-by-four-lumber-measurements-explained/
They could be requiring phishing-resistant MFA, which OTP is not
Slo-mo guys just show up with a fat stack of hundos
Idk but I wouldn’t risk it when it’s easy to encrypt stuff. Good security is done in layers.
What about a torrent? You’ll have to encrypt with 7zip or something to keep it secure, but that and qbitorrent will do the trick.
doesn’t allow you to do anything you can’t do without it.
That’s false. It allows you to not need a password to unlock the volume at boot.
Im really confused why people think TPM needs to be involved in anyway when using LUKS.
Because it’s convenient
The disk will be decrypted on boot, but then they’ll have to contend with needing a password to log in
You won’t be able to upgrade to new versions when the support contract runs out, but you can install updates to the existing version as long as updates are made for it. This has always been the lifecycle for perpetual licensing. It’s good forever, but at a certain point it becomes a security risk to continue using. The difference here is they won’t sell you another perpetual license when the lifecycle is up.
They’re terminating in the sense that they won’t sell it anymore. They’re not breaking the licensing they’ve already sold (mostly, there was some fuckery with activating licensing they sold through third parties)
These are the temps in the notoriously cold Minnesota as well. I’m unsettled and upset.
I have a Sonos portable speaker that I keep in the kitchen but take into the bathroom while I shower. It just sits on the shelf outside the shower. I like music while I shower, and doing it this way keeps good quality without risking the speaker.
I need to care for myself as well as him.
This is important. Sort of a “put your own oxygen mask on before helping others put theirs on”
On Windows, I like NAPS2. I haven’t tried it on Linux, though
Notice how you’re ignoring the machine management and selectively choosing to focus on the user management. User management might be fine with Linux, but machine management can’t compete with GPOs, especially for managing Windows clients, which is what businesses are using for workstations whether we like it or not.
I like Linux a lot, but saying you can’t understand why someone would run Windows on a server just shows a lack of knowledge. Linux is great in a lot of server applications in the application realm. However, it doesn’t get close to the power of Active Directory and Group Policy for Windows device management. Besides that, a lot of people are more comfortable with a UI for managing DHCP, DNA, etc in a SMB environment. Even if they prefer a command line for those tools PowerShell allows those people to coexist with those that prefer a GUI. Under certain circumstances, (mainly ones where a business is forgoing AD for AAD), Linux can be the right choice. Pretending that there’s no place for Windows Server, though, is asinine.
I had a few domains there. I migrated them to Cloudflare as soon as I saw the news that this was coming.
Whether or not the price is right is another discussion, but I will point out that they’re not charging for you to see the events. Like you said, there’s a web server and API for that. They’re charging you for them to store the history and serve it up on demand, which does have ongoing costs and I understand not accepting a one-time purchase for.
If you want history, hook into the API with Home Assistant or Grafana or something and store it yourself. It’s either that or pay them to store it. Infrastructure that stores and serves up the history doesn’t come from nowhere, and an ongoing cost for an ongoing service kinda makes sense.
The Stargate movie was good, but SG-1 far surpassed it.