

As far as I know Mint and Fedora have the same choice of Desktop Environment more or less, I’m really curious to know what you refer to when you say “modeen interface”
As far as I know Mint and Fedora have the same choice of Desktop Environment more or less, I’m really curious to know what you refer to when you say “modeen interface”
Honest question: why buy from doordash at all when you have 120$ in the bank? Why not buy groceries and eat a simple, healthier, cheaper meal?
If’s been a while I haven’t used xc, I will look into it and see if that works for me. The only real benefit of xc compared to keepass is hidpi support because it doesn’t use Mono on linux
Mainly otp generation (which I believe XC implements natively), ssh key agent, to lock ssh private keys inside databases and the Kee integration for browser completion from the database.
Then other small things I have just for fun, like generating QR code from some secrets because certain apps only take the secret as a qr code and plugins to generate passphrases
It’s not bad, but there aren’t all the useful addons that keepass has
What is more conveniente for a hacker? Finding a vulnerability in Last pass, accesding millions of users and possibily billions of passwords, or trying to get your keepass database file that at best contain a thousand passwords? Not relying on an external service grants you protection just on that. Also offline databases don’t carry passwords over the net, so one must steal files from your computer or physically access it
KeePass2 as a pasword manager. Less convenient than online, but so much safer, there’s also Kee, a browser extensions that connects to the database locally and autofill passwords in sites
I used modern gnome and I seriously don’t understand how it’s “more modern”, most changes feel a downgrade, I cannot divide apps by categories anymore, I only have a big menu that takes all my screen and shows me like 15 apps at a time, unlike “traditional” desktop apps I can control with Alt+Some keys I have the same toolbar filled with burger menus and icons with no text so difficult to use, gnome file manager is objectively inferior in features to Nemo, and don’t get me started on the desktop, when you click an application icon on the application bar it doesn’t even minimize like on every other desktop interface.
Either ubuntu ships a broken version of gnome or it just sucks, and there are also all kind of management issues that make development very inefficient.