Bitwarden is probably a lot safer if you self host (which I do). You do inherently lose some security by having a server that holds your encrypted password database, but my instance isn't exposed to the internet.
ryuko
Exactly, the patent system is so outdated and software as a whole should not be possible to patent.
It might represent a total change to the VR/mixed reality landscape, but that $3499 price tag is just killer.
Mine isn't very interesting, but sure
Private DNS Quick Settings Toggle - Definitely a bit niche, but I sometimes need to turn off private DNS when it doesn't work on some wifi networks, and this saves having to go several menu items deep every time.
Or any Kojima game.
With more gen Z'ers becoming eligible to vote, there needs to be a push to get everyone registered to vote and show up for every election, regardless of scope. Their vote plus the millennial vote boom will hopefully push out the politicians destroying the US.
I have a relatively small setup, because of space and cooling constraints, but in that setup:
- Generic server with a Xeon E5-2697 v2, kinda old but it's still got 12c/24t, and 64 gigs of memory
- Around 40TB of storage space, of which I'm using roughly 1%. I'm not even a datahoarder, I'm just a storage space hoarder.
Everything I self host runs through Proxmox, either as a LXC container or as a RHEL 9 virtual machine. I also have a RasPi running Pi-Hole for ad blocking.
Considering the anime she's from, probably violently with one half of a large scissor.
I have a 2DS XL with custom firmware, since emulation isn't perfect yet, and the console is infinitely portable.
I also have a hacked Vita, but that doesn't get much use anymore since it was just a Persona 3 Portable and 4 Golden machine, and that's now on PC. It's still sometimes handy to play niche games that were never ported to other platforms.
Or perhaps it was the hundredth time one of our software engineers had innocently pushed out an img tag with an empty src attribute. Nobody joining the team could be expected to know that in early versions of IE, the browser would load the root path “/” for empty src attributes. The img tag would suddenly behave like an iframe, loading our homepage and all of its dependent resources in what could become an exponentially expanding recursive loop.
Amazing, the Trident engine really was something else. Also interesting, based on the web browser graph at the end, there were still people using IE6 in 2012, wild.
Vaultwarden is a good Bitwarden API compatible self hosted server that individuals can reasonably self host, with way fewer system requirements than the actual Bitwarden project's server.