Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | runejuhl's comments login

Or just put key IDs in a .gpg-id file:

Initialize new password storage and use gpg-id for encryption. Multiple gpg-ids may be specified, in order to encrypt each password with multiple ids. This command must be run first before a password store can be used. If the specified gpg-id is different from the key used in any existing files, these files will be reencrypted to use the new id. Note that use of gpg-agent(1) is recommended so that the batch decryption does not require as much user intervention. If --path or -p is specified, along with an argument, a specific gpg-id or set of gpg-ids is assigned for that specific sub folder of the password store. If only one gpg-id is given, and it is an empty string, then the current .gpg-id file for the specified sub-folder (or root if unspecified) is removed.

-- https://git.zx2c4.com/password-store/about/

EDIT: Better formatting


I use pass ( http://passwordstore.org/ ). Uses gpg, has addons for all major browsers, works on Android, is completely transparent, supports segmenting your password "tree" to use different PGP keys depending on path (e.g. all passwords in www/ encrypted to both my safe GPG key and my less safe key unique to my phone). Highly recommended.


any iOS app for it?


There are a couple: https://github.com/davidjb/pass-ios https://github.com/mssun/passforios

Passforios is being actively developed and is shaping up well.


Or, for a more cross-distro approach, `lsb_release -a`, although it requires the `lsb-release` package installed.


Truly cross distro is cat /etc/* release


From the network tab of Chrome developer tools:

  AngryBots11.wasm	GET	200	webassembly.org	xhr	UnityLoader.js:187	11.9 MB	54.38 s	GitHub.com	
  AngryBots.mem	GET	404	webassembly.org	xhr	UnityLoader.js:72	5.6 KB	172 ms	GitHub.com	
  AngryBots.memgz	GET	200	webassembly.org	xhr	UnityLoader.js:47	314 KB	1.30 s	GitHub.com	
  AngryBots.wasm.mappedGlobals	GET	200	webassembly.org	xhr	AngryBots.js:279	3.1 KB	250 ms	GitHub.com	
  AngryBots.datagz	GET	200	webassembly.org	xhr	UnityLoader.js:47	36.3 MB	2.9 min	GitHub.com	
  HWStats.cgi	POST	200	stats.unity3d.com	xhr	AngryBots.js:6595	149 B	3.80 s	Apache/2	
Just shy of 50 MB all in all.


Keep in mind this is built in Unity. It's difficult to make even trivial native apps in Unity in less than 25 megs.


The Unity WebGL engine is about 5MB gzipped. You won't get a web export smaller than that, but you shouldn't need 20MB of assets on top of it for a small game either.


For a point of reference, Three.JS's source code hovers around 100KB gzipped, sometimes more, sometimes less. That is a factor of 50x difference.


three.js doesn't have 1/50th the features of unity. three.js is great and ive contributed to it but a game engine is a lot more than just a renderer.


Would you be interested in a service where you buy your own server (metal/VPS/whatever) and through an API/web interface select which profile to run? E.g. webserver (apache, nginx, ...), mail server (postfix, exim, ...), load balancer, database (mysql, pgsql, ...), or "app" (ownCloud (has CalDAV support), Wordpress, etc.)?

The idea is that the server is yours, and yours only. We manage the setup, monitoring, alarms and all the boring stuff. If you need any assistance, we have sysadmins that can help for a fee, and depending on how critical it is for you, we'd offer multiple levels of subscription with different service levels and response times.


Honestly, I'm not sure what I want.

You mention response times and priority support, and are talking about choosing nginx vs Apache. That's far more detail than I care about. I want to click a button, give you my card details, have an inbox and calendar that I can easily access on my phone, work machine and home machine, and with some level of guarantee about the security and privacy of my data. I'm not bothered about support response times - 99.9% of the time I'm not going to need it.

I want google mail + Google calendar, without the Google.


Thank you for responding.

The listed roles were just to show the idea of the service; an role providing mail and calendar (e.g. Kolab) would only have a few required options (if any). Any additional detail would be optional and have our default recommended values.


I would say there are plenty of people who _would_ be interested in that sort of a service. I've been thinking about this since I wrote the above responses, and I'm fairly certain that what I want is gmail + google calendar + google drive, without the google. The more friction or configuration steps I have to go through, the less likely I am to use it.

Case in point: I'm not particularly happy with providing LastPass with my password info. I currently pay for their service. In order to transition to KeePass, I have to give up the automatic sync functionality between my devices, I have to manually back up my key database myself, and I lose the browser extensions that lastpass provides. I'm finding it hard to justify switching for the above reasons.


Same here. I settled on fastmail, and I'm pretty happy so far!


For those of you who're interested, the mail to LKML can be found here: https://lkml.org/lkml/2016/6/28/629


How timely. Right now I'm sitting in a house on the beach in Tolú, Colombia. I work remote 32 hours/week for my employer in Denmark doing development, sysadmin and consulting.

I'm here with my wife and my two kids (4 and <1 years) and we've been on the road for almost a month.

So far it's been great. It took a few days to get started with remote work; tooling, getting the computer set up for low bandwidth work etc. I don't have fixed working hours, although I try to work a few hours in the morning and then 3-4 hours at night after the kids are sleeping. That might change soon, though, as I think we'll have to incorporate a proper siesta after lunch for my wife and the kids' sake; I'll probably use that to work. It's just too hot in the middle of the day here to do anything if you're not used to the heat (and even then -- the locals have siesta as well).

We're staying in this place for three more weeks (been here one week), and then we're off to another place. Currently it looks like we'll buy a used car to avoid some of the hassle of traveling with kids and to be able to see places off the beaten path. We're talking about heading North to Santa Marta, but nothing is planned yet.

I've been working from home in Denmark for some months before we left, so my family is somewhat used to me shutting them out when I'm working (or trying to). Re: work ethics: I guess it helps loving what you do -- although the beach is really inviting when it's pushing 35 degrees outside... Realizing that the reason why we're even here in the first place is due to the trust of my employer helps as well!


That's pretty much what I came here to say. I travel frequently, use my credit card everywhere, both online and offline, and I have never had any fraudulent charges to my cards.

Only once have I canceled a credit card before it expired, and that was after finding out that a popular hostel booking site let the hostel managers look up all credit card details, including the CVV number, for all bookings. I talked to the manager at the place we stayed for a few nights in Lima, Peru, and he told me that the site would only show the details once (or for a limited period), so they would always print the page. Of course they kept the printouts in a binder in the common area of the hostel...

I really don't understand why USA has such a big problem with credit card fraud, and how that problem became big enough that people would actually avoid paying online, with the exception of major chains/processors (Amazon, Paypal, etc).

Although, come to think of it, Denmark is a bit of an outlier. We have a national credit card, Dankort, that was conceived and implemented sometime in the 1980s (I'm a bit too young to remember the details...). It was written into law, and part of the law was that transactions should incur no costs on the user, which resulted in massive adoption, to the benefit of both the banks (who were proponents of the Dankort before its introduction) and the consumers.


Just prepend the command with `\`, that disables aliases.


Possibly this one: http://www.gentoo-wiki.info/TIP_Bluetooth_Proximity_Monitor

I remember using it at The Party in Sweden, circa 2006. A bit newer then :)


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: