IBM or China. Long third might be Oracle, but I wouldn’t bank on them doing something not stupid.
IBM or China. Long third might be Oracle, but I wouldn’t bank on them doing something not stupid.
It’s a good lesson to learn if you’re working with Samba frequently. Just always that there are two auth systems at work: SMB local to the server and filesystem, and the SMB protocol auth that does network access.
👍
It’s not just a config thing, you need the local guest user and an smbpasswd entry to match: https://serverfault.com/questions/630631/how-to-make-samba-share-to-not-ask-for-password#632296
If you just want to remotely interact with LUKS to unlock it, I think dropbear-initramfs module is your only option.
Clevis+Tang is essentially the same thing but automatic, and yes it does require a separate machine and network access to that machine.
This post is phrased in an incredibly confusing way that doesn’t make parsing the problem possible.
Please rephrase in steps to illustrate the issue you have, such as:
Clevis with TPM+Tang is the most secure you’re going to get as far as automated unlocking goes.
Dropbear is still a thing, but going to be more problematic.
I mean…if you just want a text-based working environment, there are plenty, but nothing as a full DE that I’m aware for a number of reasons.
I think VTM is the one that is most like what you posted, but there are also other terminal environments that act similar to eDEX, but I would lump more in the IDE category.
Your drive is encrypted. You either need to disable that, or boot back into Windows and shrink the partition and clear up space to install.
The only other option the installer sees with no free space is take over the entire drive.
AMD will have superior support and better power management out of the box hands down.
Nvidia may have a minor performance improvement in some areas depending on the card, but not in a way you would care if you aren’t obsessed with the technical specifics of the graphics on AAA games.
I’ve been on Linux as a dev and daily driver for 20 years, and Nvidia drivers are just problematic unless you know exactly how to fix them when there are issues. That’s an Nvidia problem, not a Linux problem. Cuda on AMD is also a thing if you want to go that route.
The choice is yours.
Lol, classic deflection of someone who insecure in their knowledge about a subject and trying to change the subject. Personal attacks. Weak sauce, guy. Have a time with yourself.
Two words then: Flipper Zero
You’re behind the times on this one. This is a common tool used to defeat all kinds of locks. The Z-Wave exploits have been around for a LOOOONG time now. There’s also BT and RFID exploits as well, hence the CVE is posted above.
You’re missing the point here…🤦
You mentioned Yale Smart Locks, and that CVE is specific to Yale Smart Locks. Has nothing to do with Z-Wave, but if your lock has a contact reader, it’s susceptible.
Sure: https://www.securityweek.com/100-million-iot-devices-possibly-exposed-z-wave-attack/
Also a 2 year old CVE yet to be addressed: https://cvefeed.io/vuln/detail/CVE-2023-26943
These locks were exploited many years ago, and I don’t believe they are considered to be safe.
The streaming services work by browser, not platform. If Firefox can run it on Windows, it can run it on MacOS, Linux, Android…etc.
Something must be wrong here.
Care to elaborate more?
Can you mark title as resolved?
If you don’t care about the session manager password challenge, then set it to allow you to automatically login. Then you only have the LUKS challenge, and if you’re comfortable with that, go for it.
In all practical reality, Linux takes A LOT to topple over like this. It certainly would fair better than Windows with wonky hardware, but if it’s a laptop for example, maybe your fans aren’t working and therefore it’s a heat. Just try and define what kind of freeze it is first.