Rayne from blood Rayne
The joke is, that the php devs force the C++ Dev to buy them all a beer. Pretty sure that’s a reference to the nature of the php interpreter being written in C. The C Dev is carrying their water so to speak.
In situ processing should solve that. Imagine a machine where you put that in, it gets crushed and sprayed and the liquid is transported and recycled.
Integration of trigonometric functions.
Spend your time doing what you like and talk to women you meet while doing that. It has several advantages for dating. :)
Slock (suckless-tools)
I have to correct myself there. I confused that with opentasks. My bad. Sorry
I used that until a few weeks ago. It does not support repeated tasks and the widget is essentially the only good thing about it. It’s also essentially unmaintained. Even used to donate to it regularly but nothing came of it.
DavX5 suggested I switch to jtx board. It’s widget is not as pretty, but at last it’s feature complete.
Edit: also Next cloud is a php security nightmare and it’s performance bottlenecks are a pain in the rear. For calendar/mail/tasks/contacts I use SoGO. It’s pretty barebones but works very well.
GrapheneOS w/o Google tools Schoulf be safe.
Bottom line, don’t run bleeding edge distros in prod.
This. My company’s servers are all Debian stable. Not even sweating the issue.
IT security, I hold a BS. Its truly interdisciplinary which makes talent so fucking skilled people. It’s amazing. It spans from math to electronics via computer science and also touches on physical security like lock mechanisms. Endlessly interesting.
Is has actually usable offline swype. With third party library though.
I’m surprised nobody here mentioned SoGO. It’s a fully featured web mail interface that integrates contact management and a web calendar including caldav, carddav and task support. Easy up setup and easy to connect to any phone via foss apps.
Thought so too, and looked it up, Burning Chrome is from the 80s.
Debian for 20 years with some formative years in Gentoo. Always went back to Debian. No regrets.