Oh yes, fan of theirs. My reasoning behind Framework is they actually develop for upgrades. If you have the first 13" model, you could have updated ram, CPU, ports, battery, even the screen at this point. Fairphone is very repairable, but the upgrade path hasn't been there that I'm aware of.
Maybe Framework will make an Android phone.
So many words evolve, and if you're not in an industry that uses the original way, you never learn it. There are toooons of words like this.
So stand between the troops and the Ram?
To clarify, the desktop BitWarden client, only.
And this was corrected.
No, this comment was wrong. Most of the back end is not closed source. One piece of code for secrets management is closed source, that is not used in clients and was accidentally (allegedly) added to the clients, which they removed.
Vaultwarden is open source.
Personally I think people are overreacting. If BitWarden were to do something dumb like shift away from GPL, there would very quickly be a fork.
Checkmate.
There are people in the comments debating on if this is supporting Jan 6 or mocking them. It's.. it's a.. you know.. turd on a desk.
And then there's the permit of your still unsure (emphasis mine):
This desk represents the heart of democracy, where decisions are made, voices are heard, and the future is shaped. More than just a place for work, it is a testament to the ideals of transparency, accountability, and representation. Here, the power of the people finds its expression through the diligent efforts of those who serve the public good. When rioters broke in to destroy these ideals, this desk stands firm, so too must the principles of equality, justice, and freedom that it represents
Noting then /s, but this is what people are asking. What I don't see is:
"Because I mentioned it in a documentary I made a couple of years ago that aired this past weekend and learned my comment was included. And I've eluded to it multiple times, to multiple people, and told a podcaster years before."
My problem with that extension is the separate profile requirement (so new links can't open in a specific profile), and some things (like Slack) don't fully work outside Chromium.
My solution works like this:
- Slack open as PWA in Chromium in profile Work
- Click link to http://that
- Extension captures the request, cancels the new tab/window, sends the URL and profile name to a small service running on
localhost
- Service opens Firefox with same profile to URL
The extension is set to skip this process if the base URL is the same as the current site (Slack.com/google.com/etc).
Note: Why would someone down vote you for a helpful response? Sheash.
How does it compare to Firefly III?