Two speakers seems to be the most peaceful option
Do not trust anything I write down. I have this horrible habit of not checking sources.
Two speakers seems to be the most peaceful option
Shower thought: what if the defence budget of every country would be donated to open source software instead of killing devices?
For which they will be able to offer subscriptions in a year or 2.
Locus maps seemed interesting to me. I was surprised it was not available on F-droid. I found it on the Aurora store though. Contains ads and 4 trackers (google and facebook). Google play services is a dependency.
I’ll stick with osmand.
Upvoted for the use of “figuratively”. Thank you.
That email could have been a lot shorter.
“Dear valued Linux user, fuck you.”
Bayer is solving it a different way: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/pharmaceutical-giant-bayer-getting-rid-111358398.html
Hikvision if you don’t mind sponsoring chinese govt for the hardware and blocking it from the internet.
Yes, it’s called droid-ify. It’s on the official F-droid repo and is fully FOSS.
I installed droid-ify, an alternative front-end for F-Droid, it comes with a whole bunch of repo’s by default.
Thanks for sharing. Now I know why my battery never charges over 80% unless I force it
I like to get fucked for hours on end. I don’t have to cum and would prefer the tops to keep their hands away from my dick. The sensation of getting fucked is sufficient gratification for me. I could cum from that alone, but would try to hold that off as long as possible.
Thank you 😊
They did. I wish they made it more clear or provide a global coverage. At least they allow account removal.
Exactly. Now I created another account, have another password that can be exploited for a service I can’t use becausr it’s geolocked.
Philips said it would stop selling the devices in the U.S.
cool. So the rest of the world can get stuffed.
Internet is also communication. works great in North Korea.
Is it there yet?
you missed this part:
For Terrapin to be viable, the connection it interferes with also must be secured by either “ChaCha20-Poly1305” or “CBC with Encrypt-then-MAC,” both of which are cipher modes added to the SSH protocol (in 2013 and 2012, respectively). A scan performed by the researchers found that 77 percent of SSH servers exposed to the Internet support at least one of the vulnerable encryption modes, while 57 percent of them list a vulnerable encryption mode as the preferred choice.
They are part of nine eyes