I want you to just make a house! Well, obviously not a house like this brick house, but something like it..
JustARegularNerd
What sort of stuff do you make?
I think being unreliable is not accurate. I'm doing the whole password manager thing in what can be only described as the most unreliable way, by self hosting it, and so far I literally haven't had any downtime (touch wood).
Even with LastPass being compromised, the database itself was still encrypted and the only way in would be to guess your master password. If you have even a half decent master password, that should be plenty of time for you to have both changed your passwords, and ideally changed password managers at that point.
I really don't agree with recommending just remembering passwords in your head, because we're all human and we're bound to be lazy and start reusing passwords for certain services. And sometimes, you might have no choice but to be signed up to all different things. Even just the bare essentials for me would be email, my bank account, my superannuation, my local government account, my work password, my laptop password. That's too many passwords for me to keep track of and I know that.
If I were you, based on what you're saying, I'd probably recommend to you a local password manager that just uses a local vault, like KeePass-compatible managers, because you're entirely managing where your passwords are and how securely they're stored, and they're not open to the internet. I used to have this setup, but found it ultimately difficult to keep the database in sync on all my different devices (2 laptops, desktop, 2 phones, and tablet).
I do self host and it's worth it. I just have a Raspberry Pi in the corner next to the router running all the time and I've had no issues for about a month of doing it now.
I definitely was disappointed to see the new Outlook just mirrored the web version's mail rules. I had custom mail rules that would play a sound when triggered, that isn't possible in the new Outlook now (that I could find).
This is what stopped me from doing it. I always feel like if I've helped make one person's day a little bit better, then I've done my bit as a human.
I know how good it is when you have a really complex, niche, problem and someone gives the answer you exactly needed, and I don't want to take that away from the public, even though a company I don't support is profiting off my comments and submissions.
At least on PC, middle mouse click for the win
(But absolute pain when I'm on my laptop)
I want to comment and submit content, I just feel like I don't have anything of value to share. That tends to be why I lurk. Not sure if that's the case for most other lurkers.
The thing that gets me with this, is that Windows 11 is genuinely good in my opinion, and now that a lot of the launch day bugs have been ironed out, it's much nicer to use than Windows 10 from a UX and usability standpoint.
I feel similar with Edge. Vertical tabs, the good Microsoft integration (in my case for work), good performance, it's a totally usable web browser.
And then Microsoft squanders all of that with these invasive marketing decisions. I hate every time I start Microsoft Edge for the first time, there's these undismissable full window prompts to sign into my Microsoft account, obviously this crap that's been posted, the way Windows 10 was aggressively marketed onto Windows 7/8 users, it all leaves a bad taste in everyone's mouth.
Working in help desk and PC repairs, I'm not looking forward to the amount of tickets and retail customers coming in confused about all this, think it's a virus, think that they must upgrade or else, that they did accidentally hit yes on this and now their machine isn't familiar to them anymore.
Greed really does ruin everything.
Ah yes, Lemmy mirrors Reddit well. It even replicates those times when it looks like your comment didn't go through so you hit submit a couple more times and your comment comes through 3 times.
Just my 2c on the browser, I tend to prefer setups that I do or make as part of a guide so that I feel more in control and more aware of what's running on my PC, so I much prefer taking the time to install LibreWolf and then add a dozen extensions to it.
However, Brave is still a browser I recommend to the casual who wants more privacy for how convenient it is. And I do daily drive it on iOS too for the built in adblocking, which (to my knowledge) can't be done on the iOS build of Firefox.
My dad always tells me about how it drove him insane for days that Windows XP couldn't detect the HDD, but it showed up totally fine in BIOS. He ended up taking it to a computer shop, and the bastards didn't even tell him about the F6 floppy (instead they charged him double what was quoted because their techs had to 'learn how to do it').
It was only because they somehow even screwed that up, what should have been a simple setup of Windows XP, and he had to reinstall, that he finally learned from the internet that he needed the F6 floppy.