topperharlie

joined 1 year ago
[–] topperharlie@lemmy.world 3 points 5 months ago

hey, many of us dislike both equally! (specially the push to become the only alternative)

[–] topperharlie@lemmy.world 19 points 5 months ago (9 children)

hard disagree. life with plain text logs and daemon init scripts was so easy and nice. But we can't have nice things...

[–] topperharlie@lemmy.world 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Thanks for the advice, but a distro change for me would be a huge annoyance. I haven't have issues with my laptop's 1060 nvidia on Arch, and never had issues with the proprietary driver.

My worry is that even though mature GPU are probably well supported, I bought a relatively new one (4070 super ti) so maybe the new models have some issues due to having more features/being more extreme. Most complains here are about 30/40 models after all.

[–] topperharlie@lemmy.world 5 points 8 months ago (3 children)

oh man, reading the comments fill me with fear, as I just ordered a new computer after stretching my old laptop for 8 years or so. I was super close to getting an AMD but went with Nvidia in the end... but so much bad juju in the comments for Nvidia too...

[–] topperharlie@lemmy.world 43 points 8 months ago (1 children)

One that I can remember many years ago, classic trying to do something on a flash drive and dd my main hdd instead.

Funny thing, since this was a 5400rpm and noticed relatively quick (say 1-2 minutes), I could ctrl-c the dd, make a backup of most of my personal files (being very careful not to reboot) and after that I could safely reformat and reinstall.

To this day it amazes me how linux managed to not crash with a half broken root file system (I mean, sure, things were crashing right and left, but given the situation, having enough to back up most things was like magic)

[–] topperharlie@lemmy.world 6 points 8 months ago

One thing to think about is the encryption quality of a zip file, which I ignore.

One danger that I see is that you have the risk of having the passwords on the clear all over the place many times. Not an expert so don't quote me on this, but password managers are careful avoiding passwords on the clear as much as possible.

I don't trust any online service for that, I am using keepass/syncthing for myself, with android as the only client decrypting (as I always have my phone with me). one example of advanced security measures is that while using the app I can't take screenshots, and I hope/expect that it uses images backed by secure memory to show them to me and is careful with things like RAM and temporary files (didn't check personally though, although being open source I could)

Having to be sure that your zip app handles that seems like a hustle honestly. On top of having random passwords without the biases I would add for each separate site.

[–] topperharlie@lemmy.world 3 points 11 months ago

making sure a small part is very secure vs having to verify every domain I visit? yeah, let me keep using the current system.... are you aware of the amount of domains you connect to every day?

Also, I might be wrong, but if I remember correctly browsers/OS-es tend to come with a list of trusted certificate keys already, which makes adding compromised keys to that list not as easy as you suggest. (I don't even know if that happens or if they just update as part of security updates of OS/browsers)

[–] topperharlie@lemmy.world 15 points 1 year ago

IDK, I'll probably wait until the majority makes a decision and go with it..... oh, wait