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I got different IDs in regular browsing vs my first incognito window vs my second incognito window.

It is fucking wild that we need to resort to putting pig kidneys into humans to squeeze out a few more months of life, while tens of millions of perfectly good human organs are burned or left to rot in the ground each year.


I recently moved away from pass after a decade or so.

Two main reasons:

1. This laptop up was set up with flatpak versions of all GUI applications, including Firefox, and the browser plugin just doesn't work. I persisted with the work-around of `pass -c <path>` from the run command prompt for a while to paste into the browser, but its not ideal.

2. I realised that the Android app was archived. There's at least one fork, but who knows how that will be maintained going forward. https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S...

For now I'm content with hosting vaultwarden and using various Bitwarden clients.


I made the switch from pass recently too. I had ~400 secrets stored in it for almost the same time as you.

Ultimately I wanted something easier to sync between multiple devices. Now that I am traveling more seriously I can't get away with only having a few important passwords saved on my phone and laptop.

It was a lot easier to sync (1) file with KeePassXC and it has 2 well supported Android apps to choose from. It took me around 3 hours one day to manually move everything over, I took that as an opportunity to prune and refactor everything which is why I didn't use the CSV import feature.

Password managers for me are a "write occasionally, read frequently" app so it's pretty painless to shoot over 1 file over my local network to keep 3 devices in sync.


That's curious. I moved from KeePassXC to pass precisely because the synchronization story for the database file wasn't working so well. For too many times I ended up with an outdated database in the backend server because the sync process failed to work properly.

After I moved to pass, every credential became its own file and I rarely edited the same credential in way too many devices. For the rare conflicts I had, having it being Git made it possible to resolve them without massive hassle.

Then again, that was also some many years ago. Maybe the synchronization story is better these days.


I didn't like the idea of pushing a pass git repo to a private GitHub repo.

For now I just temporarily drop the DB onto Google Drive manually (through the web site since I don't use the app) to quickly share it to the other devices without worrying about USB cables or running native apps on each device. Then I delete it from Google Drive.

I'm hesitent to use "sync" type of tools that run on each device because I don't have a central server. Also I really don't like the idea of running any type of cloud hosted network storage desktop app on each device to have a network drive.

We'll see how it goes I suppose.

I wonder if it'll involve writing a tiny shell script that I run on my desktop machine to handle syncing it across devices and it always ensures the latest copy makes its way onto each device. That would allow me to freely add new entries on any device and worry about syncing it across devices when I am 100% sure all devices are on the same local network. I think that will work out in the end.

I don't need real-time replication because if I'm on the road using my phone, I don't mind my desktop being outdated until I get back home.


> I didn't like the idea of pushing a pass git repo to a private GitHub repo.

I had the same reluctance at first, but after considering it was protected both with my gpg key and my passphrase, and private on top of that, I came to the conclusion it is fine for me. It feels assuring to have it in a remote location where it is safe if I have burglary or fire or an accident like that. My keys are in a few secure locations too


I would never upload it to GitHub either even though it's encrypted. It still leaks the metadata. And I don't believe in cloud anyway.

I just set up a simple git server in docker for it. Takes almost no resources.


KeepassXC combined with Syncthing is enough for me too.


I've been using this combo since many years and it's been working flawlessly across: 2 mobile phones, 2 laptops, 1 Synology server.


> I persisted with the work-around of `pass -c <path>` from the run command prompt for a while to paste into the browser, but its not ideal.

There's also `passmenu` that comes with `pass`. You setup a keybinding that calls that. It autocompletes your password selection with a menu (calls dmenu) and puts it on your clipboard. You skip having to invoke the command prompt then manually calling `pass -c` and writing the path.


Well shit, I didn't realize the Android app was shelved. I checked out the fork and it looks like they're doing good work there. I'm a bit surprised that the maintainers of both didn't work out a transfer; who else better to take over the project than a active fork?

Makes me wonder if something else was the issue, such as disagreeing over security practices or the like.

> I persisted with the work-around of `pass -c <path>` from the run command prompt for a while to paste into the browser, but its not ideal.

I actually do this on purpose. The last time I checked into the plugin, it looked like it unlocked your gpg key at Firefox launch rather than at password prompt time. Also, I didn't like the fact that the plugin creator could simply send my passwords to themselves without my knowledge. Firefox and pass are big/trusted enough to not do this. But some random guy? That was outside my risk tolerance.


How has it been working for you so far?

I'm in a similar situation and considering doing the same thing as you, for the same reasons, but I'm curious about how the offline experience is.

I'm often facing periods of bad to no connectivity, and I find the ability to lookup or even update a credential offline very useful. Not sure how much of it is possible with Vaulwarden and I couldn't find the time to try it yet.


This pre-election BBC summary - https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwy343z53l1o - pretty clearly spells out what has eventuated, describing it as a "central campaign pledge":

> Trump has made tariffs a central campaign pledge in order to protect US industry. He has proposed new 10-20% tariffs on most imported foreign goods, and much higher ones on those from China.


That is not the 40-60-200% tariffs he has placed on things, depending on the day of the week.

That uncertainty makes it very hard to manufacture goods or buy raw materials.


It also disrupts JIT supply chains. Companies make decisions with certain variables not being volatile.

You now have a situation where one week the cost of a commodity is X and the following week it could be 2X. The butterfly effect across industries also cannot be predicted.

Many industries also seem to be still recovering from the pandemic period with supply of spare parts still being de-prioritised over making parts available for new units. :/


I don't think there's that much surprise at the tariffs on China; it's the tariffs on the rest of the world, especially friendly countries like Canada that are the big surprises. Also, who believes politicians campaign pledges?


Why on Earth not? Didn't people pay attention during his first term? This was 100% predictable.


The key difference seems to be that this time:

* Groups like Project 2025 spent years preparing an assault on our legal system

* This time Trump populated his administration with sycophants from day 1, instead of starting out with establishment figures

* The GOP has spent the last 8 years reconfiguring themselves into supplication

This time, Trump is fully unhinged and unfettered, and he knows the legal peril he faces if the White House isn’t GOP-held for the rest of his life.


>and he knows the legal peril he faces if the White House isn’t GOP-held for the rest of his life.

This combined with the utter self-emasculation of the Republican Party to Trump's incoherent, or at best self-serving, garbage is the most worrisome thing of all.


> Also, who believes politicians campaign pledges?

Only all the people who voted for them and all the people who voted against them?


US elections have a shockingly low turnout compared to other countries so not the affirmative you were hoping for


Maybe if Harris had made a few she would have won…


She did, everyone just sort of... pretended she didn't. So they could have plausible deniability for voting for Trump.

See also: Harris is an elite! (Trump is more elite), Trump knows business (he's a pretty bad business man), Harris did nothing in office! (She was VP), Trump is the underdog! (He's literally already been president)


She did? What was her platform? I never did figure it out.



The second paragraph of your first link: “ However, she has not provided many details on her plans”

Edit: did you read these links?

“ The American people lacked any concrete policy positions from the presumptive, and then official, Democratic presidential candidate for seven weeks following President Joe Biden’s withdrawal from the 2024 presidential race.

Despite the absence of clarity on key issues, Vice President Kamala Harris quickly rose in the polls compared to Biden”


Then look at one or more of the hundreds of links that provide specificity.

Or continue on with your willful ignorance.

It's no skin off my nose either way.


Harris was a terrible candidate. And not chosen by the delegates. The Democrats have to take some of the blame for Trump 2.0, surely?

Trump was a terrible candidate and could've been beaten if a good candidate running against him.


Speaking as someone who despises Ted Cruz to the bottom of my soul, I decided in 2016 that if Trump had decided to run as a Democrat, I would have voted for Cruz. At least he has some sincerely held beliefs that do not involve his own wallet and cruelty towards the entire world outside his inner circle.

My point being: at some point the American electorate has to take responsibility for picking the worst available person. The Democrats did not compel them to vote for Trump.


≥The Democrats did not compel them to vote for Trump.

Perhaps i didn't make my point clear. Indeed ur statement is true. I was referring to those who hated Trump but also hated Harris and so DIDNT VOTE. My point being that if the Democrats had fielded a compelling candidate many of those who didn't vote may have voted for them. Enough to win. The Democrats learned nothing when they fielded Hilary Clinton and lost. Joe Biden barely won. And only because they were sick of Trump and also how he handled Covid. Also don't forget the Democrats tried to run with Joe for a second term when he was clearly unfit. Huge turn off.

So yes, my argument is the Democrat Party is partly at fault for Trump 2.0. They did not field a worthy candidate.

"Vote Blue no matter who" is a failed strategy. And rightly so.


> Joe Biden barely won

That's slightly revisionist. He won the popular vote by almost 5 percentage points. That's a lot. He also got more electoral college votes than GWB (both times) and Trump in 2016. His victories in the battleground states were also by a higher margin than Trump's in 2016, though still close. "Barely won" is a shade of true.

I honestly don't blame the guy for believing it was his responsibility to the country to run for re-election and keep Trump out of office. His heart was in the right place, even if the rest of him wasn't up to the task anymore.


Trump in 2020 was such a shitty candidate that he should've been easily trounced.

So anything a lot kess than that looks to me like ”barely". Perhaps im too harsh?

I get why Michelle Obama wont run but i think she would've trounced trump in 2020 or 2024.

The democrats need to field a candidate that has her kind of appeal to beat trump.


I love how people are blaming democrats for electing trump. Its just such a dystopian timeline lol


Really?. I argue that if the Democrats could've fielded a candidate voters felt good about voting for, it would've been no contest.

What is wrong with my logic?

It sounds like ur logic is: if u don't want trump then u have to vote for the (shitty) democrat candidate.

My point of view is based on those who DIDN'T vote at all, not people who voted for trump because they didn't like harris.

Oh wait, its entirely their (non voters) fault trump won, is what u would argue, correct?

So the democrats have no responsibility to field a candidate worthy of a vote except their not trump or Republican?


> Also, who believes politicians campaign pledges?

People who actually understand politics and who realize that the extent to which politicians keep their campaign pledges is usually related to how their parties end up performing in the legislature, rather than just being dishonest.


The em-dash everywhere. The constant bullet-lists with bolded titles. The emoji-annotated asides for emphasis.


There is nothing wrong with em-dashes — they are awesome.

Definition lists are built into HTML.

Pull quotes have been a common style for at least thirty years.

I have no idea if the article was LLM-written or not. It didn’t have that smell for me, but perhaps I just missed it.


Convenient timing!

I've moved my credentials over from pass to Vaultwarden about a month ago (after discovering the pass Android app was abandoned and pulled off app stores), and spent the last two weeks since discovering Pocket ID migrating a few self-hosted services to OIDC.


I've pulled the trigger.

When Pebble died I decided that I'd rather less smart and more battery than more smart and less battery, so I got a Withings watch and have been reasonably happy since.

But this looks really good now and I'm happy to support it even if it doesn't win over my wrist space.

Hopefully they sort out Health Connect support on the Pebble Android app by January so that I can at least sync steps between watches if I'm switching between them.


Me as well, I have a drawer of watches and I want to use one but the 1-2 day battery life is just a dealbreaker .. 30 days will probably make me care to put it on again after the charge is done.


I’m always surprised by this, I charge my watch every night when I take it off for bed, I just put it on the magnet snap charger instead of on the wood itself, I’d be taking it off either way. Why is short battery life a deal breaker for people?


Because one of the best things about wearing a smartwatch is that you can use it as a silent (vibrating) alarm that doesn't wake anyone else up.

I've heard some people say that newer AWs can last indefinitely if you charge only while in the shower. That could be good enough. But I still don't want to have to bring another charge cable with me every time I take a trip. One week is good. Two weeks is great. A month is amazing (partly because after the battery degrades for years, it will still be two weeks).


That’s a fair use case I suppose, but honestly I find my smart watch a bit chunky to sleep with. I could buy a $20 smart watch or a fit bit off of amazon or something and just wear that as my bed alarm, but I totally get that has its own trade off.


> The latest Daikin indoor units have a built-in WiFi module which only allows control through their cloud infrastructure.

Which ones?

My Alira X from a couple of years ago is currently talking directly to Home Assistant over WiFi. For a year or so I've been unable to update firmware without losing the functionality, but it looks like the community has a fix pending verification: https://github.com/home-assistant/core/issues/99251

I have another old unit that I'll have to replace eventually, and ideally it could be Daikin and would work natively without involving external hardware.


My experience is strictly with Daikin Stylish units bought a few months ago in the EU. They still have both the S21 port and a compartment for an external WiFi module, and for all intents and purposes it's plug and play. Their standard WiFi module is built in the internal unit motherboard AFAICT, and it only works with their Daikin Onecta platform (no local API whatsoever).


> The AI Free tier gives you unlimited code completion and access to local AI models

Looking forward to giving this a try.

Work provides me with tooling and requires that I stick to approved AI tools, and my hobby-coding alone is just not important or regular enough to justify a paid subscription.

It's been a little annoying that I can have ollama running locally, enable ollama and configure it in my IDE, but still (seemingly?) not be able to make use of it without activating a paid AI Assistant license.

It makes perfect sense that cloud models would require payment, and that JetBrains would make some margin on that.

But I'm already paying for an IDE whose headline features have recently been so AI-focused, and if I'm also providing the compute, then I should really be able to use those features.


You are getting the AI FRee tier with any paid license for a JetBrains IDE and as you stated it should work with local AI models. I looked through our internal documentation, and I couldn't find anything that stated anything different. If you run into issues, please open a YouTrack ticket and we can have a better discussion/look at what's going on, but with everything I see, I'd expect it to work the way you think.


AI assistant license is now included even in Free tier so you should be able to use Ollama without any problem after 2025.1 release.


> The only viable business model for a web browser, the one that literally all major browsers use, is to accept money from a search engine (Google, specifically) to be make them the default. Even Kagi makes its own Orion web browser, for exactly this reason.

The only viable business model ... while the incumbent (IE, now Chrome) is allowed to give the product away for free in service of some other predatory agenda.


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