AnAmericanPotato @ AnAmericanPotato @programming.dev Posts 1Comments 133Joined 1 yr. ago
I’m not well versed enough in Android app development to answer whether or not one userspace app can even access the screen contents of another app without root or special permissions
This requires special permissions and explicit user approval every time an app starts screen recording, plus it shows a red notification whenever screen recording is active.
I think you could get by with a one-time user approval as a device administration or assistive app permission, which you'd need to manually grant in Settings. Unlikely anyone would do that by accident.
That might be different for system-level apps. I haven't bought a carrier-branded phone in 10+ years so I'm not sure what that's like these days.
Oh! I knew European outlets operated at higher voltage, but I didn't know the standard circuits supported such high current. Jealous!
Almost has to be. 2400W would put it completely outside the consumer market. Consumer PSUs don't go that high. Home power outlets don't go that high unless you have special electrical work done. I can hardly imagine what a cooling system for a nearly 3KW system would look like.
Works for me in Wayland on Bazzite. Maybe depends on your distro and GPU drivers.
It means that when they go to KFC, they bring their own tactical spork.
Kind of the opposite. It takes more effort to make a filesystem case-insensitive. Binary comparison is the laziest approach. (Note that laziness is a virtue.)
I'm on the fence as to which is better. Putting backwards compatibility aside, there's a perfectly good case to be made for case-insensitivity being more intuitive to the human user.
Apple got into a strange position when marrying Mac OS (case-insensitive) and NeXTSTEP (case-sensitive). It used to be possible to install OS X on case-sensitive HFS+ but it was never very well supported and I think they axed it somewhere down the road.
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Removing copyright entirely is a bridge too far.
Just roll it back to a reasonable time limit (I dunno, 7 years?), and categorically reject all further lobbying attempts from Disney and the like.
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I don't know OP's country or culture, but in most places I've seen, there's a pretty big gap between "technically legal" and "generally socially acceptable".
I don't think you can expect any VPN to work without sign-in for very long. Google's playing whack-a-mole with VPNs.
I've never actually tried signing in with yt-dlp. How easy is it to make a throwaway google account nowadays? Do they require phone verification or something similarly onerous?
There's no way to do this entirely within HTML. What you need is some kind of HTML builder/compiler. You could potentially write a simple Python script to loop through your
<a>
tags, check the size of the linked URL, and update the link text.This is network-specific. It's been going on for a few months at least. yt-dlp itself still works without sign-in, if your network is not "suspicious".
Always worth making sure you're updated to the latest version of yt-dlp, but this is probably a network thing.
Yes, I loved classic Trek for showing a better a future, where humans have moved beyond our greed, prejudice, and self-destructive tendencies. That was the through line in TOS and TNG, even if it wasn't always 100% on-point and didn't always age well (you need to view TOS in its historical context to get past the baked-in 1960s sexism, for example).
There's a place for cautionary tales, and there's a place for aspirational tales.
I liked Discovery well enough for what it was, but I hated its picture of a future where good humans are the exception rather than the rule.
Nowadays, I think solarpunk is where its at.
Thomas Nagel: "What is it like to be a bat?"
Colossal Biosciences: "lol who cares as long as it looks like a bat?"
Are you sure about that? The star over each icon indicates that both of them are bookmarked.
So either this is a bug or there is a second bookmark hiding somewhere. If you go to Bookmarks > Manage Bookmarks and search for "qb", what appears there?
Dating website: probably way too soon to share, just looks cringe
You might be right in this case, but I also want to point out that most dating profile fucking suck, and it's not because they are too "cringe" or immature; it's because they are all the same generic pictures. Wedding, gym, hiking, dead-fish, bar, dog.
This is the kind of thing I call a "loser filter". It stops the kind of people you don't want to deal with from entering your life in the first place.
A paper-only journal would defend against the state, but not against people you live with. A digital journal can be encrypted, but an intelligence agency could potentially gain access
A digital journal doesn't need to be any more government-accessible than a paper journal.
Depending on your threat model, this could require special hardware, special software, or both. In order of ease of setup, I would suggest:
- Keep all your data on your own physical media. No cloud services, period.
- Keep it encrypted.
- Disable network connectivity at every level that you possibly can, such as:
- OS level: disabling wi-fi, disable blutooth, and disable networking entirely.
- Firmware/BIOS level: If you BIOS has options to disable networking components (especially wireless ones), do that.
- Hardware level: If your laptop has a switch to disable wi-fi, use it. If ethernet, unplug the cable. Etc.
- Physical level: Remove any removable wireless cards or antennas.
- Wallet level: buy a computer than never had wi-fi or bluetooth in the first place. This could mean a retro computer, or could mean using a micro-pc like some models of Raspberry Pi.
Likely this. Temperature and humidity also affect your sense of taste and smell, plus they can affect a hot drink's evaporation rate.
Neither of those can stream video in real time AFAIK. They will back up the video file on some unpredictable schedule after you're done recording. So not ideal for a situation where your phone might be seized or destroyed.
But if that works for you, there are lots of open-source options that work similarly. SyncThing can sync to any server, and all you'd need to do is make sure your sync destination is network-accessible somehow (VPN, internet-facing server, whatever). Lots of cloud drive apps can auto-upload photos and videos, and some of those are open-source.
A better off-the-shelf proprietary workflow might be a Zoom call with cloud recording enabled. Then you'd be protected against a sudden (and perhaps permanent) loss of network connectivity.