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I’m gonna buy a Garmin instinct because I realized I don’t use 95% of my galaxy Watch’s “smart” features.
All of the phones I have had have had practically flat fingerprint sensors, For example, the Pixel 3a XL which is closest to me right now has an inwards facing sensor.
Rear scanners had no reason to go away. Imagine a phone with one giant fingerprint sensor/touchpad on the back(like the PS Vita).
I think it’s nicer to physically move something.
Here’s a hot take: The magic mouse is actually really nice. I worked in a lab with new iMacs and magic mice, and the gestures just felt great. If it wasn’t a part of such a closed ecosystem, I would have one myself.
хахаха нисе оне !
вэрэ ис ыоуp аддресс ?
Could it be like this? Archive.org ISO
I imagine Russia will do far better because they are not completely isolated from the rest of the world like North Korea.
Now that’s my type of kernel
Libreboot*
What is the appeal of Arc? I’ve just seen it like opera gx but for normal people.
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Yes, it’s all a trade off of functionality for privacy.
If you need meet, then try enabling webrtc(media.peerconnection.enabled
). BE WARNED THAT THIS MAY MAKE YOU SUSCEPTIBLE TO FINGERPRINTING. If already enabled and you’re still facing issues, then my issue might lay elsewhere.
No. However, the issue was ultimately my fault. Google meet relies on webrtc, and I disabled it to prevent fingerprinting.
The issue was likely WebRTC being disabled. The thing is, WebGL and WebRTC should be more secure. They shouldn’t be implemented in ways that make it easy to fingerprint the user. Unfortunately, for now I can’t change that, but I can use alternative methods like Jami or temporarily enabling rtc again to use a locally hosted instance of Jitsi.
Oh, I guess so. I get that, but facial recognition does exist, and that’s what I use mainly, even if my phone’s fingerprint sensor is accessible.