I was using alacritty for a long time, but I swapped to kitty recently when I started using Wayland
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So the “terminal” is the basic CLI that you use in the single-user, text-based mode. Terminal emulators are graphical programs that run in multi-user, graphics-based mode, and they hook into the terminal and allow you to access it inside graphical sessions. Some examples would be alacritty, kitty, urxvt, konsole, or terminator
rufus@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Technology@beehaw.org•Carmen Osorio, expert in technology addiction: ‘It’s not a good idea to give children a smartphone; in any case, you let them borrow yours’
3·2 years agoI don’t have a mustache, so maybe?
Living Room-Ba. Guess which room the charging base is in
rufus@lemmy.sdf.orgto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Is it possible to safely check for certain characters in a password?
2·2 years agoFull-stack dev here, not necessarily in answer to OP’s question, but in my experience it is a pretty standard practice that when you log in to a service, the web page sends your unhashed creds to the server, where your password is then hashed and compared to the stored hash. Via HTTPS/TLS/SSL, this is a reasonably secure practice since the creds are still encrypted while in transport. Hashing is a computationally expensive process that (before the advent of WASM) wasn’t really feasible to do on the client side.


Hey! Another SDF user in the wild, what’s up!