setsubyou

joined 2 years ago
[–] setsubyou 32 points 1 year ago

Amazon is not quite as dominant in Japan. Rakuten is still alive.

[–] setsubyou 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Comparing to macOS is actually impossible because fde can’t be turned off on Macs at all. Macs (and iPhones etc.) handle encryption of internal storage transparently in hardware at pretty much no overhead and without the CPU even having access to the key. You can only choose whether a login is required for the Secure Enclave hardware to be able to access the key.

On other platforms it’s pretty much a hardware question too. PC vendors and hard disk vendors could do the same thing Apple is doing regardless of whether the OS is Windows or Linux or whatever. How fast the OS based encryption is only matters on hardware that doesn’t have this functionality.

[–] setsubyou 3 points 1 year ago

The T2 chip is only in Intel Macs. ARM Macs have the Secure Enclave too but it’s part of the main SoC, not a dedicated chip.

[–] setsubyou 2 points 1 year ago

If it’s a Mac then it’s not the CPU that’s doing the encryption for the internal drive. Macs have separate hardware for that, the CPU can’t even get the key.

[–] setsubyou 12 points 1 year ago

Macs have encryption in hardware in the dma channel for their built-in drives (Intel Macs with T2 and all ARM Macs), so the overhead is negligible on the internal ssd. Macs actually don’t even have unencrypted internal drives anymore. The filevault toggle only affects whether the volume encryption key stored in the secure enclave is itself encrypted or not.

Older Macs and external drives are a different story of course.

[–] setsubyou 2 points 1 year ago

If you need python 3 there's also graalvm but its python support is still "experimental".

[–] setsubyou 4 points 2 years ago

In anderen Worten, Google glaubt dass Zugriff auf Google schlecht für IT-Angestellte ist?

[–] setsubyou 8 points 2 years ago

I'd go mad too if someone tried to train me on AI created data all the time...

[–] setsubyou 2 points 2 years ago

On desktop macOS the link just works with the built-in thing.

In 1password (probably regardless of what it's running on?), if it's not registered as a handler for the URL scheme, one can add an OTP field to the login item for lemmy manually and then copy-paste the entire setup link into the field.

[–] setsubyou 5 points 2 years ago

Maybe 1.5?

It's not that it's completely useless, but it's not designed as a learning tool. It's a game designed to keep you engaged. While it's possible to pick up some things from Duolingo, what it actually rewards with streaks and leaderboard positions and so on isn't learning, but just engaging with the app. It's pretty easy to fall into a trap where it keeps telling you that you're doing well, but you're not actually making progress, because demonstrating progress is completely irrelevant for getting rewarded. And on top of that it teaches some things that are just outright wrong, it even gets kanji readings wrong.

[–] setsubyou 3 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

あざっす

[–] setsubyou 6 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (3 children)

I don’t think it’s a protocol issue. It’s not that different from how e-mail lists work. Except most users are on a very small number of big instances (which makes it easier).

In Usenet it’s even worse as messages have to go through multiple hops and aren’t filtered by what groups users subscribe too, and that worked decades ago on hardware less powerful than a cheap cloud instance is today.

Lemmy is still tiny in comparison so I think it must be a software issue.

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