

I feel like OP missed an opportunity to title this post “Fedora Flatpaks Fall Flat”
Great article, BTW
I feel like OP missed an opportunity to title this post “Fedora Flatpaks Fall Flat”
Great article, BTW
The answer to your question is zero yet at this he same time zero is not an answer to your question.
Looks like this happened:
OpenSSH server has had built-in support for WebAuthn keys since 8.2.
According to Framework support, there are no supported models as of yet.
I have a Framework 13 AMD running Linux Mint. It works great and I love it. Modular IO ports are super nifty.
Here are the downsides as I see them:
I expect 2&3 will come in the future and I can upgrade! The fact that I can upgrade rather than throw it away in the future offsets 1.
Sodium Laureth Sulfate is what makes toothpaste foam and what makes your mouth “feel” clean.
What type of key do you have. Yubikey 5 supports multiple protocols including some you can use with SSH:
SSH would need to implement webauthn to support FIDO.
Secure can also mean more resilient. The infosec C-I-A triangle has three legs. Confidentiality, Integrity and Availability. Immutable distros are more resilient and thus offer better availability in the face of attacks or accidents.
I like S3 because I only pay for what I use and it has auto storage tiering.
I once had a coworker named Fanny Weiner.
Awk is a turing complete programming language.
Does Fedora have a long term support version? Last time I used it a decade ago I had to upgrade every 1-2 years.
You should name it Hawk, so people can call it Hawk-Tui.
We had one case where a line had been strung over a lighting ballast in a janitor closet. Whenever that light was turned on the whole network would go down. Since it was only on for a few minutes intermittently it was a nightmare to find. You would go looking for the a bad terminator and the network would come back before you checked a single one. Good times.
So is Visual Studio basically dead at this point? Are any new programmers choosing to use it?
Been using KVM fir years. Works fine for me.
I run Emby and MythTV on a Beelink Mini PC. It is a little pricey compared to some of the options you mentioned but not by too much. It works really well and is very quiet:
https://www.amazon.com/Beelink-SER5-5560U-500GB-Computer/dp/B0B3WYVB2D
I remember when SFC was first introduced, I excitedly wrote a script to invoke it remotely so I could use it on a user’s pc when they called to fix their problem. To this day I have never run that script. This was in 1998.
What are your use cases?
Typically the GPL covers the source code. Compiled, packaged and branded binaries are sometimes licensed separately. This is how Red Hat works for example.