I found keepassium for the work phone and I was in love that I could keep a separate db with my OTPs under a password and backed up.
Then I left that job and had to split my OTPs. Vanilla keepass for droid will gives me the OTP values for gitlab etc, so it's good there, but Vanilla keepassium for Android has no camera/QR->OTP input that I have yet, one that works like keepassium does and is all compatible down the line. I'd love to keep using it to maintain the existing separate keepass OTP db I have.
Do you (or anyone) know of a good combo for droid that gets
keepass
backup to box/gdoc/etc
qr for OTP
In one final package? Does XC do it in a way we think may be compatible?
Hm i switched from KeePass to Bitwarden because the latter lets me use my passwords on multiple devices and as a Firefox extension that enters my credentials at a shortcut.
Can you elaborate why you think KeePass is better?
It's very useful if you don't use a password manager and/or reuse passwords.
The most useful part about it to me is the API. You can tie it in to Active Directory to blacklist all hashes that appear in any breach, plus expire/force a password change if any user on your domain uses a password that has been in a breach. It completely eliminates that vector from threat actors immediately.
I wanted to buy a soundbar, looked through all the prime deals and they were kind of meh. Then I checked CCC and saw there was a Sony one cheaper then normal and not even "on sale" or associated with their prime day event. So stupid, but I got my cheapish soundbar.
Same! I find the alerts come at times when there are no holidays or events. Like on a random Tuesday afternoon in the middle of June I get an alert that a game or movie is $20 when it's been $40-60 the last 6 months. Prime Day comes around and it's "on sale" for $55.
I literally just used this site last week to set up a price alert for a purchase.
Noticed via their chart that the item I wanted to buy (an air purifier) went on sale every few weeks from $340 to $199. I set the alert for $200, and the next day it emailed me saying the price had dropped. Saved me 140 bucks which was awesome.
It plots every genre of music on a 2D spectrum ("The calibration is fuzzy, but in general down is more organic, up is more mechanical and electric; left is denser and more atmospheric, right is spikier and bouncier.")
You can click on any genre and get band recommendations.
Or you can search for a specific band and find other bands plotted similarly.
As someone who doesn't use Spotify, this is amazing for music discovery. I should have been in bed a while ago but keep finding new groups to listen to.
From the description, this site seems to either be a Spotify research project, or at least powered by Spotify data in some way. It's not clear to me.
Every Noise at Once is an ongoing attempt at an algorithmically-generated, readability-adjusted scatter-plot of the musical genre-space, based on data tracked and analyzed for 6,259 genre-shaped distinctions by Spotify as of 2023-07-12.
Personally, I cancelled my spotify account and moved to a combination of Plex and Tidal, but this project is just too cool not to use.
Wow the CNN lite thing is awesome! I think it'd be great to set up a permanent redirect to it from the CNN website. Probably will use TamperMonkey and set it up
I was scrolling the deep sea site and at over 2000m I was not expecting to see any mammals and then at 2400m there was the Elephant Seal. I'd have never thought that those massive blobs of animal can do such amazing things.
Hacker news is good for links, but the comment section can be radioactive with capitalist tech dude bros that think technology and VC funding is the answer to the worlds problems.
The United States abandoned the gold standard. I am guessing the point of this website is to suggest that was a bad thing. There is a lot of debate around the gold standard and most "mainstream" economists have no love for it, so I'm not saying the website is right or wrong, just that that's what it's about.
They link up with your bank account and generate as many virtual cards as you want that are locked to the first vendor you use them on so if say McDonald's get their card data stolen it won't be able to charge the card for anything other than McDonald's.
They also make their money from the card fees so they manage to be both free and not sell your data.
Yeah, use a VPN and make sure it and your network settings are configured properly. I’m running my stuff in a docker image that’s already preconfigured to prevent IP leakage with VPN support.
This is great. Reminds me of a late night show that used to be on in the UK featuring minimalist techno played against a backdrop of stock 60s and 70s space race footage. It was called The Trip for those that remember it.
Yes, I know. Everyone knows about wiktionary but I cannot get over how english wiktionary is better finnish dictionary than finnish wiktionary. And english wiktionary has all the languages usually.
I see Wiktionary, I upvote. As a linguistics student I hail Wiktionary as a God, the etymologies and some of the IPA transcriptions have done a lot for me
You beat me to it, so let me recommend what I check when Anna's Archive and LibGen don't have what I need (usually recent articles that are not on Sci-Hub): Standard Template Construct, here's their GitHub repo
https://globe.adsbexchange.com/?icao=a2c897 - track any airplane in the world, in real time. Amazing resource when your flight is delayed to see exactly where the plane is.
If you have a little technical skill, you can set up your own raspberry pi ads-b receiver really easily. Just need the raspi, and SDR dongle, and an antenna. Floghtaware provides a flash image for the OS. If you feed them data, you get a free premium subscription. I used to use it to get alerts when the state patrol speed trap aircraft were taking off so I knew not to speed on a long interstate commute.
They offer 10% off on sign up and randomly in email. With 10% off the airpods and some of the phones are pretty good deals. Just seems hard to know how good it will be. At least with ebay you get some more info to make a decision.
It's basically CHATGPT but with actual connection to the internet (so it gets its data from actual websites) and is also specifically designed for developers.
Also Discogs to track and buy music by media/versions and Rate Your Music to discover new stuff. Charts and lists are useful, especially the Ultimate Box Set.
Did you know that using a link text such as "this" or "here" is bad for accessibility? Screen readers will highlight links separately, and context will be lost. Instead, you might want to use a link with a better description, such as: regex101.com
You can get gift cards for Xbox/PS/GooglePlay/Etc. for roughly 8-15% discount. They even send 15% off (max $2) off codes almost once a week. I have been stacking $10 of Playstation credits every week for less than $8.
You can also buy and sell games too, but everything seems to be going digital now anyway.
In case anyone has problems with the searx(dot)be public instance, you can always find more public searx instances on searx(dot)space.
It has a list of more public instances and some onion TOR instances as well.
Recently I've had issues where searx(dot)be has not been able to load if I search something in the little web bar on the Firefox based browsers and sometimes have problems where it'll give me some sort of too many request errors, so I just heard to a different instance to solve it.