Dropbear + manual input, but I guess you could do that as a single command somehow. I rarely restart this machine, so copying the PW from my PW manager is acceptable for me.
Dropbear + manual input, but I guess you could do that as a single command somehow. I rarely restart this machine, so copying the PW from my PW manager is acceptable for me.
Modern CPUs have some RAM encryption features, but ultimately you’re running on hardware outside your control. Personally, I use full disk encryption (except for /boot) and unlock remotely via SSH, but that only helps against automatic scanning of the storage.
Is anyone even still buying Factorio? I was under the impression anybody who could possibly be interested in it already owns it. It’s also quite cheap.
Basically every app that is related to a proprietary service. Amazon, Battle.net and Steam authenticators, banking apps, Spotify, etc.
If you think search engine giants like Google can’t track you when you’re not logged in, you think wrong.
Yeah, it’s really flexible when it comes to arrays and string processing. Super easy to work with, too.
No one has mentioned PHP yet? Man, times really have changed.
Does it have native encryption?
permissive license
Definition?
There have already been projects like that in the cryptocurrency space.
Apparently totally useless when you don’t enable history or don’t use the services (Google, Facebook, etc.) at all.
Broad definition of “big” or “community”.
Development is so slow it’s genuinely hard to believe.
Usability is rather lacking.
I’d say avoid it for the time being and I say that as former long time user.
Never was a scam. What are you on about?
There is multi device support.
Mullvad’s DNS servers at the router level.
In total I ran nearly 400 benchmarks across all the CPUs. When taking the geometric mean of all the raw performance results, the Ryzen 9 9950X came out to being 17.8% faster than the Ryzen 9 7950X. The Ryzen 9 9900X meanwhile was 21.5% faster than the Ryzen 9 7900X across this wide mix of workloads. The Ryzen 9 9950X was 33% faster than the Intel Core i9 14900K performance overall and even the Ryzen 9 9900X was 18% faster than the Core i9 14900K. For those still on AM4, the Ryzen 9 9950X was delivering 1.87x the performance of the Ryzen 9 5950X processor. These are some great gains found with the Ryzen 9 9900 series.
With the Intel Core benchmarks it’s also worth mentioning that the testing was prior to the newly-released Intel 0x129 microcode update and I’ll have more benchmarks with that change soon. As of writing the Core i9 14900K is retailing for around $550 USD while the Ryzen 9 9950X is set to retail for around 18% more but delivering 33% greater performance on a geo mean basis overall. The Ryzen 9 9900X meanwhile at $499 is around $50 less than the i9-14900K while overall delivering 18% better performance. A slam dunk in performance, value, and power efficiency with the AMD Ryzen 9 9900 series compared to the competition.
Somehow I feel all those negative reviews from techtubers aren’t really adequate.
Is it because of your particular bank or is that a general problem?