You can, but I recommend btop
. It’s much more cooler.
You can, but I recommend btop
. It’s much more cooler.
For a person with not much familiarity with Linux, and just wants to check things out, I would recommend starting out with a VM. WSL is good, but that is not the “Linux experience”. Moreover, if they are not already familiar with the command line, it may be a bit intimidating. The same goes for dual booting. It’s more technical, and it’s more appealing to just jump back into Windows when things go wrong on Linux. VM approach though, gives you a sandboxed space where you can smoothly get familiar and comfortable with Linux before making the final switch. That’s my personal opinion for beginners.
I don’t use Proton Drive too much, but for my use case, it works great. I sometimes save files in there and share them via urls, and it works great for that use case.
The last time I used Bitwarden, the base plan did not support 2FA which is a must for me. Keepass keeps it local, and supports 2FA too. These days, I use Proton Pass more because I want easier sync across my devices, but I back up everything to Keepass every once in a while.
Here are the ones I use:
This is the hardest and you might need to hop a lot. But, these are the ones I have: FreeTube, Grayjay, LibreTube, NewPipe, PipePipe, and if none of these work, then YTDLnis (yt-dlp client)
ProtonMail (Tuta is heavily suggested too, but I personally have never used it)
Proton Drive (although I don’t use cloud storage much)
Stock and AvesLibre (I heard Immich is good too, but I cannot afford self hosting atm)
VLC
VLC
Proton Pass and KeepassXC
ProtonMail and K9Mail
Proton Pass and KeepassXC
Breezy Weather
anime waifus
It’s a ROT cipher. This is what it means:
I love you. Will you be my boyfriend?
“4” is just the shift. All letters are shifted four characters forwards.
Cipher vs Actual
A → W
B → X
C → Y
D → Z
E → A
…
Z → V
Kneel down and clear the stone of leaves…
If you want updates, may be go for gen 6/7. 5a won’t be receiving updates after August 2024.
There’s a built-in network toggle for applications (in their respective App Info / Permissions page) in GrapheneOS. So, if you’re on Graphene, it’s a piece of cake.
Else, you might want to look into NetGuard (https://f-droid.org/packages/eu.faircode.netguard/), which offers app-wise internet blocking.
As for the “using app over a VPN” thing, you can just turn on “Always-on VPN” and “Block connections without VPN” toggles in Settings / Network and Internet / VPN / <Your-VPN-Settings>.
Didn’t try this particular link, but in general, with a feed link, you can plug it in any feeds app and get notified whenever the user posts something. Feeder is a good android RSS feeds app.
I’m glad that you want to switch to Linux, but I think there’d be open source solutions for Windows too. I daily drive Linux, and I would begin with looking for open source timers if I ever need timers. Why not do the same in Windows too?
Here are a few: https://alternativeto.net/software/free-countdown-timer/?platform=windows&license=opensource