Someone’s handed me nested base-64 encoded JSON before and to this day I am moderately annoyed at them.
Someone’s handed me nested base-64 encoded JSON before and to this day I am moderately annoyed at them.
Oh, that’s annoying. Works fine on Voyager for me.
Same for users — just change the ! to an @.
Example: @[email protected]
universe.take()
Mobile Firefox. The swipe menu is empty on Niagara.
Immediately onto the lap.
SSH over Tailscale to Termux (all three free) using private-key authentication — two levels of e2ee, and fairly easy to use.
For small bits of text, I use one of these, depending on the direction and the source device:
xclip -o | ssh phone termux-clipboard-set
ssh phone termux-clipboard-get | xclip
termux-clipboard-get | ssh laptop DISPLAY=:0 xclip
ssh laptop DISPLAY=:0 xclip -o | termux-clipboard-set
For larger things, or files, I use scp
. For other devices that I haven’t setup beforehand, or can’t set up (e.g. can’t run arbitrary programs), I connect to my phone’s hotspot, and use Total Commander’s Wi-Fi transfer addon for files (both of which are also free). Small strings I just copy over by eye and hope it goes well.
I’m on Librewolf, but Floorp sounds nice!
Tab grouping is nice, but I’ve found Sidebery to meet my needs (specifically nested tab groups, and separating projects — plus it worked out of the box with Firefox Color) much better. I have it configured to automatically unload collapsed branches, which is nice as a tab hoarder, and it can fully send entire panels to your bookmarks for later usage (this is a massive performance improvement when you’re regularly opening 100–200 tabs/day per panel). A native solution, however, would be much appreciated — as long as there’s a way to nest tab groups and unload their contents.
Do those rules change if the language accepts translated keywords?
The only times I’ve had tmux ‘crash’, I’d realized I forgot to enable linger.
Nonce, maybe?
Voyager, at least, will still let you see deleted replies in your notifications — it’s only tapping on them that will show they’re deleted.
And I ain’t the sharpest tool in the shed
Ah, that’s de Morgan’s law.
Arm Holdings has issued a cease & desist against Armcord being named Armcord, by the way.
Based on your quite, this is a use-after-free, meaning that despite Firefox marking the memory region as free to be reallocated, it continues to use the memory. This is dangerous as an attacker may be able to allocate in that region, leetting them change the old structure’s values.
Does P for Proton count?
I just had to add URL-encoded TOML to something due to a certain Rust crate’s constraints.