

I have nothing particular to suggest but I just want to say this sounds great and happy to see. Enjoy!
As you mentioned Linux Mint is very beginner friendly so I’d recommend that.
BOO!
I have nothing particular to suggest but I just want to say this sounds great and happy to see. Enjoy!
As you mentioned Linux Mint is very beginner friendly so I’d recommend that.
Thank you for your reply, this is helpful to know.
That’s what I currently do as well, I just backup particular .config subfolders and other directories. I’ll probably continue to avoid just raw transferring an entire home directory on a new install.
that’s a good question and I’m not sure. Worth it to find out, but personally I don’t dual boot with Windows. I just have my main linux install and use a virtual machine. I never have needed to use a windows virtual machine but it would be interesting if I could activate it with the copy that came with my laptop.
Unless that copy is registered to my microsoft account? I have no idea that’s how much I try to avoid windows now
This is the way.
On a related note, would you recommend restoring an entire home directory (including the dot files and all the dot directories) once I reinstall all the packages after a fresh install? Would it basically replicate my restored setup or would there be random issues that emerge? I’m thinking particular system settings related to kde/gnome settings, but others I might not be aware of.
have you ever seen a commie drink a glass of water, mandrake?
It’s difficult enough for getting people to switch from whatsapp to signal.
I don’t know how successful i’d be to get people to switch to simplex.
Is there a particular reason that you don’t recommend signal?
sir your website is not working for me
Good explanation, and I figured the same.
I feel the ‘encrypted at rest’ is then a false sense of security. Alas it is much better than gmail, etc.
excuse me ignorance, but I understand that once you receive mail from someone with shared pgp keys, they’d have no way to read the contents.
But when I receive an email from any service that sends me mail, or from a friend that doesn’t use PGP, it sits encrypted in my account… but how do we know proton isn’t ‘reading’ the contents when it is delivered and before it is encrypted in the account?
Is there a possibility of data mining or them storing the contents on their end? like a mirror image?
I’ve gone long years without using any social media associated to my identity, as many others do, and i’ll eat my cooked shirt if I start thinking, “hey sure why not let me into this shitty internet”.
I’ll be fine without using the internet if it comes down to it, at that point it’d be a liability. Dinosaurs think they can control the internet which is a hilarious proposition in the first place.