Simple. Your users don’t care if it’s insecure. They click on fake password reset emails. You’re the bad guy here. They still haven’t forgiven you for requiring them to enter numbers when they want to log in.
Simple. Your users don’t care if it’s insecure. They click on fake password reset emails. You’re the bad guy here. They still haven’t forgiven you for requiring them to enter numbers when they want to log in.
Rest in peace, BaconReader. May your codebase somehow live on as a Lemmy client.
I’m not a distro hopper. I settled on Ubuntu, which was fairly quick to adopt Wayland. I haven’t had any issues beyond the occasional app (kitty) that doesn’t show decorations properly without minor tweaking. (And, despite its name, X forwarding over SSH works just fine.)
Many things will have a description or notes field — such as AD accounts, Exchange rules, SharePoint sites, and the like. Sometimes it’s visible to the user, and sometimes not. Always try to write something in there. That’s a great start.
It’s happening to me, too. This is what happens when there’s a perceived “default” instance. (That reminds me, I should really move off of mastodon.social.) Thankfully, I can still pull communities via search.
As someone who lives in the suburbs, I don’t really have a choice. This and the rural parts of Connecticut simply weren’t designed for public transit. At best, I’d need a car to get to a bus stop, or to the train station serving NYC. Statewide, it’s a little better than it was even ten years ago, but only the biggest cities around here will remotely be considered car-free.
At least there’s a cheap fast-charger near me, so car trips do wind up being inexpensive, and I’m not spewing pollution behind me as I drive by peoples’ houses.
Interesting. Mine sometimes fails to wake up with ZFS. I wonder if automatic snapshots are the culprit.