I see. I may try to do something similar but towards Unbound on my OPNSense router, if that’s possible.
I see. I may try to do something similar but towards Unbound on my OPNSense router, if that’s possible.
I suspect DoT and DoH still go through, though? I mean you can always block the port 853 for DoT, but DoH is another story.
That’s an Estonia thing, not a Europe thing. Estonia is notorious for being the land of IT. In the rest of Europe, IT is heavily male-dominated. I just finished an IT tech/sysadmin training in France: out of 15 people, 3 were women, and it was probably one of the best ratio they’ve ever had. It seems there are a bit more women in the programming courses recently, though, but they’re still a minority.
At my current job, out of a little over 100 people in various IT teams, 10 are women.
No you don’t.
rm -fr /
requires the flag, but rm -fr /*
does not.
Reading/writing multimedia files (videos, pictures, audio, text documents…) on an NTFS partition works without issues. The issue arises when using one as a system partition (to install video games on, or worse, the whole Linux install). I don’t know exactly what’s causing issues, but my guess is metadata/permissions get messed up on NTFS when used on Linux.
That’s still the case as far as I know. I would highly recommend against using NTFS on Linux for anything else than simply storing files.
Kobo devices are easy to install KOReader on.
You should also ask yourself what kind of books you want to read. Black and white comic books, for instance, can be read on an e-reader, as long as the screen is big enough.
DuckDuckGo, but mostly because of the !bangs. I do 90% of my searches through StartPage (!s), and the rest directly on a few websites (Wikipedia, YouTube, Arch wiki…).
Reddit is required by EU law to delete all of your data if you ask them to (and you’re an EU citizen). I suspect it’s much harder to do on the fediverse, though in theory they’re subjected to the same law.
If you’re basically recreating Linux Mint from scratch, yes.
Linux can be heavily modified, and removing Snap from Ubuntu is no exception. But it’s an involved process.