Unix
Minix
AIX
Irix
HP/UX
Ultrix
OSF/1
Linux
Those are just the ones I remember because I’ve used them
Unix
Minix
AIX
Irix
HP/UX
Ultrix
OSF/1
Linux
Those are just the ones I remember because I’ve used them
They got rid of the desktop app.
Also, with shouldn’t have your seeds. They’re encrypted before they are transmitted to their servers and only decrypted on the device.
You can, though. But not through their app. Someone reverse engineered their protocol and wrote a program that connects like a new client, which you then approve, and it dumps all your random seeds into a text file. I then put them all into Keepass.
Edit: Unfortunately, the author has deprecated the project as Authy has added some attestations to their API, seemingly for this exact issue. https://github.com/alexzorin/authy?tab=readme-ov-file
Elm or mutt? Say pine and I’ll die
I don’t understand. That’s essentially where I learned Fedora from. Where did you learn to use Windows?
That’s how I grow my own chickens
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They are not vital. Almost no countries in the world practice trial by jury other than The US, the UK, Australia, Canada, and Ireland. The US is the only country in the world that uses trial by jury for civil cases.
The law is complex and nuanced. Most people lack the understanding and background to apply the law justly and uniformly. It is an antiquated idea that should go.
My boss bought a mining claim west of Fort Collins. I can confirm you are correct.
Where does one find these multitasking settings?
What if Fedora is running on ARM?
Sorry, I didn’t find the self hosting option when I looked at the site. I see it now. Thanks!
I looked for that on their site but missed it and found the pricing instead. Thanks! I’m definitely going to check that out
What part of that is self hosted?
I’ve never seen it on a map
Git is too hard for you. Please stop using it
Maybe we can ask ai how to make more power so there can be more ai. But then, when it tells us, we just mine more crypto. Fuck ai. Crypto won’t murder us.
When I was at Qualcomm we had an experimental, internally developed mobile OS that embraced the ubiquity of the browser and the power of apps written for the browser. The code name was b2f, which stood for “boot to Firefox”