

If you need to restore it, back it up.
How do you plan to restore if the whole drive dies?
If you need to restore it, back it up.
How do you plan to restore if the whole drive dies?
I’d say you want Linux from Scratch then, but even then the Linux kernel maintainers are making choices for you.
But Linus is very firm in that they never break userspace, so you should never see an issue like this when updating the kernel.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principle_of_least_astonishment
Someone should inform whoever made that change. If a package is split in a new release, the initial state should match the final as closely as possible, in this case by installing the new optional dependencies automatically. (Although I’m not sure why they’d want to split everything out like that anyway; no other VLC distribution does that, so splitting is itself a violation.)
Maybe Manjaro might be an alternative? I haven’t personally used it. I don’t like this kind of surprise, so I stick to boring distros like Debian. I used to use CentOS but it was too boring.
Recover the accounts and close them?
Most web servers already use the Host header.
What’s your budget?
Apks can be unpacked. There are plenty of offline scanners with high or no size limits too.
There are probably also Android-specific scanners.
If you’re buying used you’re not directly funding Google.
That’ll work great up until the kid finds out about changing the MAC address.
A Chromebook?
Firefox will get HDR on Firefox?
And they’ve answered their own question by listing several valid candidates.
Right. One of the facets of cryptography is rounds: if you apply the same algorithm 10,000 times instead of just one, it might make it slightly slower each time you need to run it, but it makes it vastly slower for someone trying to brute-force your password.
You can probably disable it entirely by changing the kernel boot options.
Yes. There’s no real way to differentiate.
Well not never, you’ve got the Senators.
Which will never not be funny to me since it’s Latin for “old men”.
I’m not familiar with pangolin but it looks like they document how to set it up: https://docs.fossorial.io/Pangolin/Configuration/wildcard-certs
If your university uses Office 365, G Suite, or a similar product, I would examine those options first.
Yes that’s a pretty normal graph feature for any dataviz application.
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