I read some articles about using a virtual environment in Docker. Their argument are that the purpose of virtualization in Docker is to introduce isolation and limit conflicts with system packages etc.
However, aren't Docker and Python-based images (e.g., python:*) already doing the same thing?
Can someone eli5 this whole thing?
understanding a big codebase you have never worked.
I want to do this kind of transfer.
host/client A:
dir:
- file a
- file b
- file c
- file d [host B][download]
host/client B:
dir:
- file a[ host A] [download]
- file b[ host A] [download]
- file c[ host A] [download]
- file d
Also, I am not looking for syncthing, I need something which syncs meta data(not sure if this is the right word) not the actual files., and option to download individually or as per selection and run in background like KDE CONNECT.
I have read quite a few posts about preventing account password takeover from various malicious ways, and many OPSEC measures are there to prevent it from happening.
Consider a case where you face a total blackout or technical failure. Now, you need to log in to your password manager, which requires either OTP on email or TOTP. You don't have access to the TOTP app because the backup is stored in cloud storage, whose email login also requires OTP.
How would you prevent such from happening?I haven't found a satisfactory solution or explanation for that yet.
https://f-droid.org/en/packages/helium314.keyboard/
Customizable open-source keyboard
Operating system: Linux Mint Package manager: APT
We are here talking about updating Firefox, which comes pre-installed with the OS.
While other packages go up to 13 MB/s, Firefox downloads remain at a maximum of 500 kB.
Get:1 http://packages.linuxmint.com virginia/upstream amd64 firefox amd64 124.0.2+linuxmint1+virginia [74.3 MB]
Should I switch to different source?
I am working on a personal website that loads perfectly on Chrome and Chromium-based browsers but crashes or doesn't bother to render on Firefox and Firefox-based browsers. I'm unable to narrow down the issue.
This issue doesn't occur in any mobile device browser(firefox or chrome).
website: https://gecom.alexdeathway.me
source code: https://github.com/alexdeathway/gecom
https://youtu.be/0XhNM_2gYBQ
Here is Debian this with the Gnome Desktop. There are quite a number of way to customize this desktop to make it your own as we see here.
I am talking about the services which let you monitor the status of a website whether the website is up and operational or down or under heavy load.
how do they work under the hood?
for example:
I am building something similar for monitoring my web projects.
@alexdeathway
@programming.dev