The option to use TOTP is already well hidden. It’s not like someone who does not know what he is looking for and uses an Authenticator already will accidentally select it.
The option to use TOTP is already well hidden. It’s not like someone who does not know what he is looking for and uses an Authenticator already will accidentally select it.
I mean, other file sync apps upload everything to a third party while you’re working with the device.
Then, when you use another device the first one can be turned off.
Most x86 EFIs are, so the comparison is not really fair.
That’s Canonical building Mir 2.
I hate thinking of usernames and I am extremely bad at it.
How can the ISP force their dns? They can’t know where you got the destination ip from.
Other way round: prefixes that contain “bi” are binary, so 1024-based.
Yeah I get it, it was just something I noticed. A pedantic lint, you could say.
I wanted to ask why it’s bad, what did you change?
Btw. the example function get_default is badly chosen, because unwrap_or_default exists.
And that 20 second delay really isn’t gonna impact the trip as a whole.
That is true. Therefore there shouldn’t be a problem with drivers driving a steady speed in the middle lane.
The rightmost lane is never completely free. And if it is, almost all drivers do use it.
What makes your right to go fast on the left lane more important than their right to go a reasonable ~120km/h in the middle lane?
Okay, I never looked at a truck’s speedometer. The point is they are overtaking just slightly faster.
It certainly feels like most trucks are going at least 90 km/h regularly.
The problem is that even in low traffic, there is a truck on the right lane every few meters. Often, after you switch to the right lane, someone decides to drive right next to you, forcing you to brake.
It’s just more comfortable to stay in the middle lane.
Now IMHO the real problem is when trucks are overtaking with 101km/h…
Free is a loaded word and in FOSS it means “free as in freedom” as opposed to “free as in free beer”.
That’s not even free, and more importantly not free and open source.
I’m sceptical of evaporative coolers. In the short term it might work well, but it increases humidity. That leads to sweating being less efficient and generally a worse situation than before.
There would need to be a way to remove moisture from the air, which ironically was the original purpose of air conditioners, not temperature.