scratchandgame

joined 2 years ago
[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago (4 children)

Chromium is inadequate and bad.

For a anonymous browser, but not for a secure browser. The paper is purely about privacy and anonymity. No security (sandboxing, mitigations) here.

[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (4 children)

Then why does the Tor Project choose Firefox over Chromium as its browser base? Chromium is incredibly insecure and full of holes. Post this wishy washy bullshit on reddit, not on Lemmy.

Because Tor browser's goal is maximum anonymity and onion service. Firefox might be lag behind in security, but its code and features met the privacy requirements. Tor browser try to achieve some security by using noscript and block some web feature.

[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago

wiped clean?

It is windows users that pretend to be linux user.

They are root.

[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml -3 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

You should deal with problem yourself rather than asking like this. Or forget ping.

fucking anyone disliking, that guy doesn't even have knowledge what a hostname and a protocol is. They should learn it themselves. Don't need to ask.

[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

For a reasonably stable but updated os I would recommend FreeBSD. You only have to install X yourself, and linux guides doesn't work. But reading manual page and searching on mailing lists can solve every issue. OpenBSD is easier but it is a bit "slow" in performance, packages are not updated (you have to follow -current, the latest development branch).

[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml -1 points 2 years ago

They both use hundreds megabytes of RAM just to render my static page. But for hydrogen web chromium use ~35M. This is shitty.

(w3m use 10M and in most case for searching we only need text-based browser)

[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

My current issue is i see you guys constantly having issues, editing files etc.

These guy cannot self-develop

They never learn thing themselves. Never read books. Never read manual pages.

Just ignore them.

Is it not stable?

Commits to softwares around Linux (userland, system maintenance tools, etc) usually just works (even if alpha). There are few bugs.

Alpine Linux edge+testing is much stable (my only issue come from testing mesa packages, just don't upgrade this package to any version without -r0 or -r1 or like that :) )

Can you not set it up and then not have ongoing issues?

Yes.

A system that never have to su root (except for shutdown, reboot).

[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

Yes, and the guy wants to learn to programming and, for whatever reason, went with Rust.

Ok.

C is a bad choice for a first language, they will likely not enjoy it and quit. With Rust they have a fighting chance.

Untested.

[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

BSD is so dead

No evidence.

Linux might won on quantity, but its quality is not comparable to BSDs.

A typical example is OpenBSD, to quote Michael W. Lucas:

Many open source operating system put a lot of effort into growing their user base, evangelizing, and bringing new people into the Unix fold. OpenBSD does not.

The communities surrounding other operating systems actively encourage new users and try to make newbies feel welcome. OpenBSD specifically and deliberately does not.

The developers know exactly who their target market is: themselves. If you can use their work, that's great. If not, go away until you can.

They will not hold your hand. They will not develop new features to please users. OpenBSD exist to meet the needs of the developers, and while others are welcome to ride along, the needs of the passengers do not steer the project.

And it still live well?!@

[–] scratchandgame@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

You should have backups. Not hedge against 1 in 10 million error conditions.

if a partition isn't actively written to, it's less likely to suffer damage

The second one is a huge bother in desktops. I never not regretted trying it.

ok

The third one is a complete non-problem.

This is only a problem with OpenBSD. They never encourage using a huge single root partition, and never test it.

It have an asterisk, not a -

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