Well this is literally Fedora, and I offered it for consideration, not a recommendation. This seems a tad hostile.
Well this is literally Fedora, and I offered it for consideration, not a recommendation. This seems a tad hostile.
Only thing I might add would be potentially Bluefin. It is Fedora with Gnome, except Atomic. It markets itself as:
The best of both worlds: the reliability and ease of use of a Chromebook, with the power of a GNOME desktop.
It’s been fantastic for me with automatic updates and everything installed through flathub so you don’t bork your system with any misconfigured installs.
This one from LTT?
I just hate the dragging of the wire on anything that might be in the way. I go wireless for keyboard and mouse whenever possible.
Any good password manager nowadays also has an account takeover feature if you opt in. Basically your spouse / child / parent can take over your account to recover it for you if you can’t get in.
I wonder if you could do something with heuristics or a micro LLM to flag words that might be expected to be private.
I would be curious if someone could do a proof of concept with the Ollama self-hosted model. Like if you feed it with examples of names, IP addresses, API-key-like-strings, and others, it might be able to read through the whole file and then flag anything with a risk level greater than some threshold.
Very enjoyable read, thank you for sharing!
I’m like 99% sure that goes against PCI compliance, they could get slapped pretty hard with some fines or lose the ability to take cards at all.
https://www.forbes.com/advisor/business/what-is-pci-compliance/
I think Washington state has outlawed them except for things like safety signs and I think that’s great.
This is from like 15 years ago, so maybe it’s not true anymore.
I need to start doing this more… “Active” starts to get pretty stale.
A new preferences dialog has been added to Software Manager that has, among other options, a toggle to show unverified Flatpaks — but the distro makes clear this is “not recommended”
Technically, this numbering scheme conforms with semantic versioning where
1.9.0 -> 1.10.0 -> 1.11.0
Wow, 1993 to 2024, not a bad first-class support lifetime.
Also: should you wish for something with Fedora literally in the name, Fedora Silverblue and Fedora Kionite are the upstream—published by the Fedora Project—versions of Bluefin that use GNOME and KDE, respectively.
Either could be an excellent choice should you wish for
https://fedoraproject.org/atomic-desktops/silverblue/
https://fedoraproject.org/atomic-desktops/kinoite/