I also write my books in Vim. I use Pandoc to convert markdown to other formats.
Instructor, author, developer. Creator of Beej’s Guides.
openpgp4fpr:CD99029AAD50ED6AD2023932A165F24CF846C3C8
I also write my books in Vim. I use Pandoc to convert markdown to other formats.
This won’t work for you because it’s not enough space, but other people might consider paying money to a place like SDF. I think it was $3 a month (IIRC) for 800 GB of space, and it’s for a good cause.
I use rsync and gocryptfs to back my stuff up there. I also have local hard drives for backups.
Maybe there’s another pubnix that you can pay to get more storage.
Back in the day, I had local hard drives that I would mirror and sneakernet to my friend’s house every couple weeks. We’d trade drives and then we’d have an off-site.
If I weren’t using SDF, I’d probably set up a home server someplace or talk to a friend who already had one and rsync to that.
The service can determine what they accept as a password.
And what password manager you use, I think was the poster’s point.
I need to sync my passkeys between all my devices–which really means I need keepass to store the private keys in its DB so I can sync it with all the other keepass-compatible apps I use in various places. Last I looked, this wasn’t solved, but it’s been a minute. I’m certainly not using a centralized password manager unless they all can freely import and export from one another. I understand this is a “being worked on” problem.
So someday, yes.
If you get my master keepass password, you have all my passwords, too.
I agree they should. But I also agree they shouldn’t be required to. And if they don’t, that we should just live with it as the lesser of two evils.
A) I don’t think there’s anything illegal, here, and B) of course large private agencies manipulate elections, from news agencies to SuperPACs to social media, and C) there’s not a heck of a lot we can do about that.
The best thing we can do is smarten up and think for ourselves. In short, we’re doomed!😅
Hmm. I have a bumper sticker that says “I ❤️ Nuclear War”. I wonder what bucket that puts me in.
I remember it being a big space sink when I was editing video. Now all I have is DVD rips of my collection and those are nice and compact.
Yup. I signed up to their unlimited a while ago, so I was happy to not notice this at all. 🙂👍
I can’t believe how much mileage I’ve gotten out of my 512GB SSDs on my laptops. And my “big” backup disks are hand me down 1TB HDs my friend didn’t need. I don’t do video, though.
My parents are in their 80s and this crap will push them to Linux.
I switched to in-person teaching a couple years ago and am glad I did. It’s been a challenging time as an instructor finding ways to make sure I’m added value.
Supporting on GitHub. Just a few bucks a month. It won’t take many of us to get to $175/mo.
I do pony up for other services (not YT Premium because I won’t give Google any money) and support a significant number of creators via Patreon, giving them more money by far than they’d ever see from me from ads. And I’ve spent thousands of hours on my own dime making written content and giving it away for nothing with no ads or tracking. So yes, I agree.
It should never be illegal to link to infringing content in the US. First Amendment should apply if they have any sense.
We need a competitor badly.
Reminds me of sdf.org.
On the simple side, Ghostwriter is a markdown editor with no frills.