My software, QuickDAV, is not in the AUR. It’s open source, and I release it only as an AppImage, because I am lazy.
I’m Hunter Perrin. I’m a software engineer.
I wrote an email service: https://port87.com
I write free software: https://github.com/sciactive
My software, QuickDAV, is not in the AUR. It’s open source, and I release it only as an AppImage, because I am lazy.
The Firefox snap was the reason I left Ubuntu. (Or, the last straw, at least.) Fedora has been wonderful.
They must have sabotaged Trump because there’s no way Donald Trump could make a fool of himself on his own.
(/s, obviously)
You start at the San Diego.
Often enough that race car drivers wear fire retardant suits for when that happens. There’s even a rating system for how long a suit will protect you from second (and thus, third) degree burns when engulfed in flames during a vehicle fire.
Obviously, you don’t have to be soaked in burning gasoline for it to kill you, but if you are soaked in it, you can’t run away from the fire once you exit the vehicle. You, yourself, have to be extinguished, because you are the thing that is on fire.
Gas tanks, by design, are not confined. The fuel needs to get into the engine to do its job. In an ICE vehicle, there’s fuel in a lot more than just the tank.
68% of car fire deaths resulted from a fire first started by flammable/combustible liquid ignition (fuel), and 63% of car fire deaths happened after collision or overturn.
Surprisingly, the deaths counted in this study were not imaginary people. They were real people driving real cars, that really lost their lives.
That gas vehicles are dangerous because the gasoline can exit the tank, and the fire can spread that way. If the occupants are unfortunate enough to get soaked in that gasoline, a fire can be immediately deadly. It may be easier to extinguish, but it’s still more dangerous in an accident.
Sure, but I can’t douse you in a lithium ion battery.
Ok cool. What about gas vehicle fires?
Edit: in case you’re unaware, gas and diesel cars are 20 times more likely to catch fire than EVs.
Ultimately, you can’t. Even if everything you’re doing is encrypted, they have access to the RAM that’s holding your encryption keys.
If they tried to close source it, someone would just fork it.
No joke, I’ve been looking to get a mini PC, and maybe a Steam Deck would suffice. It’s cheaper and comes with a screen and inputs.
Lol. What a chicken shit.
And we warn to turn them into glass if they fucken try it.
I heard the illegals are Hannibal Lecter now. And some are sharks with batteries.
If you want cheap encrypted storage you can run a Nephele server with encryption and something like Backblaze B2.
It’s not completely FOSS, but I run Port87, which is quite a bit FOSS. It uses Haraka as its SMTP server, SvelteKit as its server framework, Nymph.js as its database layer, Svelte as its frontend framework, and Svelte Material UI as its UI framework.
The ones that I created and maintain are:
The base app layout is also available on GitHub.
Wait, is he gonna take a swing at Harris?
You can try them both and see which one you like. Gnome is great, and it’s my preference, but KDE is also great.
Ouch. xD
It’s super easy to create. And you distribute it on your own, so it’s basically like an installer exe on Windows. In my mind it’s one step above only offering source code.