![](/static/66c60d9f/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://fry.gs/pictrs/image/c6832070-8625-4688-b9e5-5d519541e092.png)
He’s wrong about what he said, too. You do not send Proton your private key.
He’s wrong about what he said, too. You do not send Proton your private key.
Proton Pass works offline. Proton isn’t a walled garden.
How do you mean? You’d just export your data.
Yes, that’s what I’m referring to. They could build on that, or they could write something their own in Rust. But I’d think building on Servo would be fantastic.
Glad to hear that!
Ship what, segfaults / invalid memory access? Lol
C++
If they’re starting a browser from scratch, why would they not have chosen Rust? Seems very short sighted to not have learned from Firefox.
Disagree. Even if we could, from what I understand, large, solid pieces of plastic are better than extremely small, thin, fragile pieces since those are going to turn into microplastics and get everywhere. I’d rather have them in one big chunk.
Were those errors that the drive was full?
Why did you cancel Drive?
deleted by creator
ProtonMail is pretty awesome and makes it very easy to switch.
A better solution might be to not travel to communist countries.
How is it possible to have less data on your than Proton? I’m not aware of anything Proton has which isn’t fundamentally required.
Once the shares vest then he can get the money. The point still stands, just not immediately.
This other side of the coin, and this is coming from a long time Linux user, is that for the vast majority of its life Linux has focused on functionality and not toward anything the majority of people care about. Only relatively recently is it a fairly good experience for the average user, but it still has some issues that will mean most users won’t even consider it.
I really wish it could become mainstream, but until it fixes that fine tuning then most people won’t consider it vs a Mac or Windows.
Remember the Zune? It has way more features and functionality than the iPod. But nobody cared. There’s a reason it lost.
A lot of us put up with Linux because of our principles or because we’re developers.
It should be illegal to include unenforceable clauses in any TOS or contract since it deceitfully implies it means something.
Sounds pretty average
Yes? You select your folders / files and click download.