I think it’s neat I’m seeing this post on Lemmy and that I can comment on it.
I think it’s neat I’m seeing this post on Lemmy and that I can comment on it.
I (tried to) send you a message, there doesn’t seem to be a ‘Sent’ box on Lemmy so I can’t verify it sent successfully. Let me know if you didn’t get it.
It’s not really meant for soliciting, but Tindie is the closest thing I can think of what you’re looking for. https://www.tindie.com/ You could find something in the same ballpark of what you’re looking for and contact the person who made it and ask if they would be interested in doing custom projects.
I didn’t really like Nebula. I signed up and canceled my subscription before I even finished a single video. Almost everything is available on YouTube for free (albeit with ads if you don’t have Youtube Premium) and it just didn’t feel like they had enough content to be charging $5/month.
Just commented this from sync
The next version will clearly be Windows 11 Series W.
Works for me, try again? Sometimes archive links take time to generate.
The given password #00rtsp00 does not work for Galaxy Note 10 plus; #00sv00 does work, but it lacks the Chromecast option.
We may not have 4 arms but we do have whatever this is https://youtu.be/ywrK1yTYRIA
Adding a comma or a question mark on iOS is maddening when you’re used to SwiftKey.
You can tell this is true because the kbin logo is literally a folder.
A fork would be a duplicated custom copy of the software that can have its own changes or improvements added and is usually maintained by a different person/group than the original. When a new update of the original is released, the maintainer of the fork can bring those changes into their custom fork.
Instances are (mostly identical) copies of the same fork. They’ll have custom names and different logos, but the software that’s running them is all version 0.18 of the same fork. They may install updates at different speeds ie v0.19 is released, some instances will update immediately, some may take a week, but eventually they’ll all be updated to v0.19.
The spice must flow
We’re still 100% Windows 10 so it hasn’t moved (yet).
At my job I have to explain to fully grown adults where the Start menu is on a regular basis.
I still have to explain to fully grown adults where the Start menu is
It’s much more secure on ‘less than trusted’ devices and for less than secure people.
Instead of having to type your password in on your friends laptop that may have a keylogger installed, you just type your username in and then do your fingerprint on your phone. That’s it; your phone verifies it’s you and then transmits the passkey over Bluetooth, so it can’t be phished or observed while you type it.
For less than secure people, you don’t have to convince them to use a password manager and stop writing their passwords on sticky notes. They just type in their username and do their fingerprint on their phone. It can’t be phished so even if someone is remotely controlling a victims computer the damage is limited to allowing access to a single account on that physical computer - they can’t take that passkey and use it anywhere else, unlike a password for an email account that’s used for online banking as well. They also can’t keylogger it and then log in after they’re disconnected from the victim.