

I mean, I’m sure it’s possible, it’s just a matter of how to get the honeypot/script on the system and give the downloaded file executable rights.
Linux enthusiast, family man and nerd
I mean, I’m sure it’s possible, it’s just a matter of how to get the honeypot/script on the system and give the downloaded file executable rights.
Sounds like you are trying to setup a keylogger of sorts…
You know what is running on your Pi, right? Just check the configs of those services and see if any are still using old.home.lab.
In my opnion, systemd is like core-utils at this point.
It’s so integrated into most things and the default so many places, that most guides assume you have it.
Thunderbird is my primary email client, so better dark-mode is a welcome addition. UI couuld use a lift in general, but I don’t mind it looking a bit dated. As long as it does what it should and does not eat all my systems resources while doing it.
Ah, so the main difference from gnupg and openpgp servers is that it can use other methods than email to identify the owner of a key. Thank you.
I guess the reason I am asking is that I have never understood the use-case for Keybase either.
So your answer does not really answer my question. 😀
What’s the advantage of something like FOKS compared to gnupg or openPGP servers?
I think it’s a great feature. I can now quickly find the thing I just installed in my menu.
It seems to use the 2.4 GHz wireless frequency, which is notoriously overcrowded with wifi, bluetooth and all manor of wireless connections. Any of these will lessen the stable connection length. So do you use other wireless devices in the area between your mouse and the PC?
Good thing I’m on Arch. They got the patched sudo package some days ago. :)
The hardware in your server should be able to handle 50-60 degrees for a long period of time, so going to 35 ambiant shouldn’t be a problem.
It should. My comment was in relation to point 2, as I stated in the comment.
“Working” is not what I would call that. The “Features” list is full of broken stuff and only 1 works and 1 partial.
Booting, yes. Working, not really.
Reason. The default in packaging switched to the wayland session.
Only reason I got it, was because it was cheaper than the Red Hat one and my employer just needed me to get a Linux certificate. So the cheapest was what I got.
Plasma/KDE decided it should be the default a long time ago and the X11 session has been in maintenance mode ever since.
As far as I understand it, it’s more of a push to wayland by default and not about harming x11 users. I for one would like to avoid having kwin-x11 pushed to my system.
Can the peertube user actually read the mapped /dev/dri path?