Training and discipline are what a body needs.
https://youtu.be/5PkUGel_OD0
"Stop Writing Dead Programs" by Jack Rusher (Strange Loop 2022)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Ab3ArE8W3s
As @mary and the pups were rolling around(playing) on the living room floor, it hit me that those two haven’t been apart a day since conception over five years ago.🐾
So I have been using pass, the standard Unix password manager, together with PassFF and it is a working solution so far. I like that it is a simple program, and that it was easy to setup, but I wish it was even easier for normies. Qtpass works well for my wife because it has an easy password/username/url template.
These folks made several great documentaries together that just got better and better. I think about them often and they should be added to school curricula IMHO.
Tales from the Green Valley
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0478958/
Tudor Monastery Farm
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4103600/
Victorian Farm
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1372211/
Edwardian Farm
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1821820/
Wartime Farm
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2470814/
I'm not a big fan of multi-factor-authentication because it is a tool being used for the de-anonymization of the internet. I don't know of any way to push back and I can't even find a list of companies that require a mobile number.
“Democracy requires Privacy as much as Freedom of Expression.”
-Anonymous
Tomb encryption looks a bit interesting. Nothing really new under the hood, but I appreciate the attempt at streamlining and polishing. I always need a cheat sheet to remember the LUKS dance.
https://www.dyne.org/software/tomb/
Linux only though.
While I was walking around in the woods this past week I thought about how peaceful and old everything seemed. The thing is, the trees and the landscape were not that old. I don't think I saw a tree over 150 and most were less than 100. The canopy was 80-100' in most places. The trees used to be old and huge averaging 5' diameters. Food literally used to fall from the sky because 25% of them were chestnut. Then, in a generation or so, they were gone and few even know if their existence.
OK, I don't use a password manager, but I'm starting to feel the need for one. If I died or had a head injury, my wife would just be hosed trying to access everything. I would probably be in the same boat if something happened to her. It would be nice to have a working solution for me, her, and my aging parents as well. They rely on their phones to do so much of everything and I'm not sure I can break them of it. Any ideas are welcome, but I keep leaning toward just writing them in a notebook.
Nostr:
npub14nglvtadg7ucv4av2l53cdrpxgqaptf88ue3kemenp6t3p7y93squtked7