How are you getting change?
How are you getting change?
What good is cash gonna do if the networked cash register doesn’t open anymore?
Oh, you actually believed that story? Whoops. Sorry! It was actually me who ate your Cheetos and downed your Vodka.
It doesn’t. It will require you to reboot for every god-damned line of code that has changed.
Na, nothing. Did an update today. Nothing bad happened at al, Because why would it?
Back in the day, when I installed my very first Linux OS, I had a wireless stick from Netgear. Wireless Drivers back then were abysmal, so I had to compile them from source (literally 15 mins after seeing a TTY for the first time). After I had found out how build-dependencies and such worked somehow and ./configure completed successfully for the first time, the script ended with the epic line:
configure done. Now type 'make' and pray
The enemy of my enemy, eh?
glibc 2.36 is all you’ll ever need, okay? Go away with those goddamn backports!
I don’t. So… uhm… you’re wrong I guess.
You know how Linux killed the chef?
With a fork bomb
We hate your music we hate you, too we got our resons, for what we do
you cannot hide, you stupid fucks We really think your music sucks
We hate - Sworn Enemy
Love how the tone alternates between rage and hate on the one side and this rational description on the other
When I hear that lonesome whistle
But the minefields are a banger scnr
Dmarc/dkim/SPF/certs. Fun times!
I got a mall server running, yet it’s almost more as an inbox.
Why can’t you? I don’t see where the issue is. During password creation, you choose your organization and it’s done. If the entry already exists, edit the entry and choose the organization under “owner”. It’s four clicks max. Do you use this so differently than I do?
That’s what organizations are for in Bitwarden. They are groups you can give passwords to instead of your personal vault and people in said organizations can then see them just as their own passwords. That’s exactly what you described, no?
Well,.Bitwarden is here for you. You can even self host Bitwarden and skip fees all together if you feel so inclined at some point.
BEFORE you mess with your VNC, it is extremely important to have a backup connection. So either you have the ability to connect your pi to a monitor and a keyboard locally, or you really, really should setup SSH before you mess with your VNC server.
Use SSH with a Certificate, described here: https://raspberrypi-guide.github.io/networking/connecting-via-ssh (“passwordless”) This guide doesn’t show how to set up SSH, but how to install a key in a more detailed way: https://pimylifeup.com/raspberry-pi-ssh-keys/
The good thing: Once you got this working, you’re basically done. Just ditch VNC and go straight to SSH from now on. It’s more secure and has better performance usually.
Yet, if you like your VNC and want to continue using it, you first connect via SSH do not do this while using a VNC connection! Now, first, you do all this: https://www.tomshardware.com/how-to/install-vnc-raspberry-pi-os then you do a
sudo update-alternatives --list vncserver
sudo update-alternatives --list vncserver-x11
you should see tightvnc listed there. Don’t freak out if one of the two returns an error that the application was not found. That’s okay. Not all versions of Raspbian used the same application name in the past, so I listed them both. As long as one of them works, you’re fine.
Then, you do a
sudo update-alternatives --config vncserver
sudo update-alternatives --config vncserver-x11
and change it to tightvnc. now you can stop your running VNC:
sudo vncserver-x11 -service -stop && sudo vncserver -service -stop
sudo vncserver-x11 -service -start && sudo vncserver -service -start
Once you did that, connect to tightvnc as described in the article. If this works, do
sudo apt uninstall realvnc
You should now be able to connect via VNC without weird account bullshit.
How is Microsoft related to a tool to scan Linux for malware?
sadly, no. Anticheat Systems are designed to be paranoid as fuck. So even some readout of the hardware used that WINE handles a tad differently than Windows might trip it.