Chill dude. Bismuth for Plasma 5 was amazing, and Polonium is shaping up to be a great succesor on Plasma 6. This is open source. You can fight and support your cause. But your attitude would make Pop Shell devs burn their own project down out of fear ๐ .
unknowing8343
I don't think you understood my comment. Sorry.
Distracting how?
Plasma is rock solid. Yes, you can break it. And that is called freedom.
If you don't install 30 third party widgets and themes, you'll be FINE, while still being able to make it yours.
That is why I always choose KDE Plasma (we'll see when Cosmic comes).
Public SSH keys don't contain any user information at all. They could have some metadata for users to easily read, but that can be deleted without repercussions.
I'm no expert, and this is probably how it does NOT work, but if you have a private key, it can generate the public key, so that could be a way to tell the server "this is me", now try me.
I was literally fighting with this these last 4 hours, and here's my conclusion:
What a goddamn mess Samba is. How in the world is it so hard to make this thing work?
I eventually realised that for my usecase minidlna
would work, at least for a while, and it was amazing how simple it was.
This is all I can say about the subject. I am surprised there are no simple ways to setup Samba folders such as a GUI that asks you "what ya wanna share? Oh, okay, you want people to write things on it? Cool! It's working now. Don't forget to check these ports on your firewall, bye!"
But then why don't you simply develop a toolkit that installs all those things and sets things up properly on a standard fedora install?
This seems something with too big of an attack surface.
Oh, wow, I do have HAOS on my Pi so this one is a strong strong candidate.
This is not dual booting in the classical way. Imagine your laptop had 2 processors, and you could be running Linux on one, while the other processor is dormant with Windows, and wakes up when you launch League Of Legends or something. But then, you minimize LoL and you are back on Linux.
Some banking services do only work through the app, believe it or not, as it is "the trusted device".
I mean, with this dualOS device it would be solved... And recognition of Linux mobile would increase, hopefully making banking apps look for other systems of "verification".
Then just install it and use it. No need for tweaks.