The contents are
https://yip.su/25X8U6
I’m not opening a random link on a Soviet Union domain.
The contents are
https://yip.su/25X8U6
I’m not opening a random link on a Soviet Union domain.
Yup, that’s the problem.
Does not matter, hydrogen is not really the future
register on X site
No, not that one.
Neither does Czech.
Apps can be on the SD too, unless you are using a 10-year-old version of Android
bare minimum
64 GB
I have 16, and half of it is the OS… 64GB SD card, though.
If network card drivers don’t work, you can transfer the file the old-fashioned way, or get online using an Android phone in USB Tethering mode (Wi-Fi and mobile data both work).
Android is not (really) a desktop OS. Devices with preconfigured locked-up Linux installations have been around way before that, mainly networking equipment.
Valve is proving that LOTS of people would use Linux if it came in convenient preinstalled packaging.
Classic Pixar movie but the 🏴 flags are red
If you’re using xkb
, try this guide. Of course, backup any system files before modifying them, and just to be sure, add a 2nd keyboard layout as backup and know how to switch between them to have a fallback if you corrupt the primary one.
There might be TUI or GUI tools too, probably way more convenient for a one-off change on a single PC.
I just changed one of the existing layouts. Very easy in any text editor, you just need to find the proper name or Unicode code for each function/character.
If non-English songs are allowed… https://feddit.org/comment/1871785
Then it’s not a tracking parameter of course.
That is very decoder-specific. The most common QR reader apps are the Camera app on iPhones and Google Lens for Android so you’ll want to target one of these (though Google Lens might be using cloud processing for that). There probably won’t be any exploits in the image processing part but you obviously can write arbitrary data (including ASCII control characters such as CR, LF, null) into the “data” part of the QR code, as the encoding mode and data length is stored in the first 4+(n*8) bits of where data would be instead of null byte termination. Normally, the data is then right-padded with repeating 0xEC11
(or not) and then error correction follows (number of bytes in the error-correction part is defined by the size and ECC mode indicated in another region).
It’s easier to take precautions though. You probably don’t have an insulated USB port or throwaway host device but handling QR codes safely just takes basic tech and skill.
Important advice:
Recommendations:
I think today’s generation’s equivalent is free Wi-Fi networks. Kids without mobile data in an area without an established public network will connect to just about any open one unless the SSID includes “LaserJet” or similar.
Has been taken down. See archived copy
The contents are
I’m not opening a random link on a Soviet Union domain.
Also, half of the QR code is filler (notice the repeating pattern), it could have been much smaller.