There are programs which replace the network calls with SOCKS routines. The currently recommended one seems to be: https://gitweb.torproject.org/torsocks.git
There are programs which replace the network calls with SOCKS routines. The currently recommended one seems to be: https://gitweb.torproject.org/torsocks.git
I liked this episode of Live like the World is Dying: https://www.liveliketheworldisdying.com/s1e35-casandra-on-food-preserveration/
It does a decent job introducing canning, drying and fermentation.
I subscribe to the podcast on Android via the PocketCasts app. You can search for the podcast by name in the “discover” panel. Then you can browse and listen to more easily.
OpenBSD is a great desktop. If you can’t live without some proprietary shit, you’re going to have a bad time.
I prefer doing most of my work on OpenBSD. I have a windows machine I can use for some garbage I am forced to use and the occasional game. Mostly I will VNC in from the OpenBSD machine.
I think we should normalize using a system that does 80% of computing tasks very well and delegating non-optional stuff to a secondary device. I don’t think there’s a 100% one-stop shopping solution to a problem as diverse as “desktop utilization patterns”.
Something… something… freedom.