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Cashew is another great, and even my favourite, finance/money/budget managment app.
Cashew is another great, and even my favourite, finance/money/budget managment app.
How do you know? They never said that moose had survived?
And they also have to let people use a VPN. And make UI load faster, it’s way too bloated.
Spreading out the internet across infrastructure nodes that can be cooled by fans in smaller data centers or even home server labs is much more efficient than monstrous, monolithic datacenters that are stealing all our H2O.
That’s definitely not true, data centers are way more efficient than home servers. But yes, they use water to be more efficient.
My daily is Pixel 7a with GrapheneOS. Galaxy S4 is my mom’s old old old phone. I have no idea how. On lineageos wiki it says that this device is not maintained anymore, but a month ago I got a system update. It’s on Linegae 18.
Galaxy S4, (was) officially supported by LineageOS :)
I have 11 years old phone that still gets updates. For free. And all my computers will have updates for ever. For free.
I used geekbench 5. My CPU is AMD Ryzen 5 5500U. I tested a few prebuild kernels and custom compiled the fastest one.
prebuild linux kernel:
prebuild linux-zen kernel:
prebuild linux-xanmod kernel:
prebuild linux-hardened kernel:
custom linux-hardened kernel:
I’m running a custom kernel on my Arch laptop. It’s a little faster, a little smaller and a little quite more secure. I’m also running custom kernel which enables adiantum encryption on old phone with postmarketOS.
Thank you very much for this detailed explanation! Looks like kptr and kexec are already disabled and enabled randomized virtual memory address in the hardened kernel. I will check for ebpf. Security certs seem interesting, I will defenetly look into them.
That could be your browser saving html instead of showing it.
I’m running self compiled hardened kernel and I enabled kernel lockdown mode. Before that it was disabled. Maybe Arch team disabled it.
Now I’ve installed it and Librewolf works nornally. Is that normal or is malloc not working or is Librewolf compiled with hardened malloc?
I’ve heard about googerteller and I never thought someone will use it (except to try it)
Thank you for the list! Do you maybe know where can I find explanations what does each option do? I know only half of them and I already use some of them.
Actually it’s not (but it was) a fork of OpenBSD’s allocator, but rewrite of a fork. They wanted too much changes so they decided to rewrite it from scratch.
That would be too big performance hit
I will try hardened_malloc, I already use it on my phone. I have GrapheneOS.
Actually you can. If you get 10 calls a day and then only 1 day 9 calls the average is a little less than 10, which means most of the time you do experience more than average.