You definitely do not need to use any pacman wrappers to build a package from the AUR. Those tools make it easy, yes, but are not required.
Building a package can be as simple as
git clone AURpackagehere
cd AURpackagehere
makepkg -si
You definitely do not need to use any pacman wrappers to build a package from the AUR. Those tools make it easy, yes, but are not required.
Building a package can be as simple as
git clone AURpackagehere
cd AURpackagehere
makepkg -si
So it was a good choice then.
Well, i guess as long as they’re honest about it, its fine.
Oh man, to be a voter who didn’t vote for Harris because she didn’t go to war with Israel must feel great rn.
They acknowledge many wrappers, not just yay. However, none are officially supported.
Pacman is the only standard package manager for Arch. Arch recommends against using third party package managers, including Yay.
What issues were you having with arch-install that you had to troubleshoot?
Rust-based and actively developed
Why EndeavorOS over arch-install
?
deleted by creator
Right but Signal has been audited by various security firms throughout its lifetime, and each time they generally report back that this messenger has encryption locked down properly.
Being critical is good, and we should always hold them accountable for our security. We can look to third party audits for help with that.
https://community.signalusers.org/t/overview-of-third-party-security-audits/13243
This entire article is guessing at hypothetical backdoors. Its like saying that AES is backdoored because the US government chose it as the standard defacto symmetrical encryption.
There is no proof that Signal has done anything nefarious at all.
Signal tells me which contacts in my contacts list has Signal. It also alerts me when someone in my contacts installs Signal.
I believe Telegram also does that.
SimpleX does not.
Can we rename Florida to Dumbfuckistan?
Do not allow http or ftp traffic as this guide suggests, unless you are active as a server for your local network on those particular ports, and you are behind a NAT firewall that your router usually provides.
I love that Mint brings people to Linux, but its users write some silly guides sometimes.
What is this headline
What’s your answer to this then?
The precursor to identifying if you are allowed to access the internet or not.
No, if they cared for that, they’d say 50,000,000,000 Bps