You mean a web browser in a terminal?
OpenBSD actually, but close
because we all know that routers have so much RAM that installing DNS, NTP, mounts, session, log management isn’t a problem? something doesn’t add up…
Yup, old Chromebooks are great. I got mine used for 180PLN (45USD), and I’m using it to connect to my computer at home via SSH to do some work there whenever I’m bored at school. The battery life is awesome and the laptop itself is great for whenever I want to test my code on it (different distro and lower specs). Though the firmware is a little weird because it doesn’t want to boot off the sd card, however I can imagine mounting /usr or something on it as a dirty hack over this.
for anyone wondering what is “LLDAP” just like me a moment ago, it’s a Ligtweight LDAP implementation
^-^
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When you’re done it’d be cool to have it posted on reddit’s unixporn for some solarpunk propaganda
Well, the software would have to change first
I just watched it, and I enjoyed it even more than Woman at War. Thanks
It’s a community, [email protected]
Ruby on Rails?
I have to just be sure that you at least know about demicrosofted VS Code, VS Codium
No one is going to develop exploits only for a browser with certain default security options disabled (especially these made at compile time using toolchain). Binary exploitation is hard, and extremely not worth the effort in this case.
The book repository deserves its own post
I watched the whole, but spoiler alert, you didn’t miss much
Something like Browsh? It still uses firefox underneath the hood though