wait. please clarify me.
if i setup a vpn which provides encryption on my local server, can i go like this
+------------------+
| . local server |
+-< . >------------+
<< . >>
<< . >>
<< . >>
<< . >>
<< . >>
+-< . >----------------------+
| < . > serveo/localhost.run |
+-< . >----------------------+
<< . >>
<< . >> +-------------------------------------+
<< . >> | . raw data |
<< . >> | < . > vpn encrypted data |
<< . >> | << . >> vpn encrypted data over tls |
<< . >> +-------------------------------------+
+-< . >-------+
| . clients |
+-------------+
sorry i dont know how to express this in words
thanks for both answers. the second option, one i cant afford.
i did some research, the first the answer is partilly correct ig. for example syncthing offers password protection (https://docs.syncthing.net/users/untrusted.html) and for the bin, it provides client side encryption (https://github.com/HemmeligOrg/Hemmelig.app?tab=readme-ov-file#features) which will protect me even over plain http connection ig. please correct me if im wrong
these are product specific feature, so generally, as you said, no is the answer ig. i wish nextcloud offers something like. thanks again
Yeah I saw that but tuid be better right
You use fedora https://lemmy.world/post/16899331
Not what Im asking for, but this is awesome!
Yeah, I have bash ls installed, but it wont teach me coding standards right
I assume you opened the link. Did you read that projnct intro by any chance? Im struggling to name the project. Some suggestion can help.
Yeah I came across that google’s guide, but I skipped it when I found out its from google. And thanks for informing about the link, I made a typo
Thanks. I checked it out. It’d be cool if they have LSP setup.
And thanks for informing about the link, I made a typo :]
My assumption:
Duplicate? https://lemmy.zip/post/17656400
tell me if this is what I’m looking for. I build Lineage OS, which requires me to download a load of apps. I wish (analogy coming) I could manage everything like a npm project, where I can keep all the dependencies under a single dir. I want to use my package manager to handle the dependencies, rather than manually downloading the bins, mv-ing them to the dir, and setting the path. Once I’ve finished building, dispose everything with just one or two commands, leaving no footprint on my OS/machine.
I dunno, I don’t wanna take part in any survey, it feels wrong to me. But filled it halfway, just to see my own thoughts on linux. BTW you shouldve added " for fun" as a option to the question “why’d you use linux”, thats the first thing that came to my mind
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could you take a look at the new image and share what you think?