dracs

joined 1 year ago
[–] dracs 16 points 1 week ago

Another recommendation for Proton Mail. As others have said I'd recommend getting your own domain for email so you can always migrate providers without having to change your email address.

[–] dracs 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I used to live opposite the one in Reservoir and it got me through lockdown. They're opening a new location opposite Melbourne Central soon. Can't wait to be able to grab it for lunch regularly again.

[–] dracs 6 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

The reason that Google got ruled against originally was that they were paying and offering incentives to developers to keep them from releasing their apps on other app stores.

Google also doesn't support a user installing the Play Store themselves (and the required Google Play Services dependency). So phone manufactures have to choose to include it on everybody's phone from the get go, or their users won't be able to use it at all.

[–] dracs 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I was just able to donate. Maybe give it another go now?

[–] dracs 3 points 2 weeks ago

I they're going to need Mr. Squiggle to make those lines look like something coherent.

[–] dracs 1 points 1 month ago

They do have e2e for emails. Any emails between Proton Mail users are always e2e encrypted, as are any emails others send you which they've encrypted with their own maio client. If someone sends you an email unecrypted (most email is), then Proton will encrypt it for you and put it in your inbox. They can't read it after that, but there is some trust required that they don't store/look at the unecrypted email before then.

[–] dracs 2 points 1 month ago

I did pick the DBrand Kill Switch case (including. skin and screen protector) for both me and my partner. It was on the pricer side, but I'm pretty happy with it. Feels quite good to hold and certainly rugged enough to protect it. The skins also stop us from getting each others decks mixed up.

As for a dock, I picked up the Anker one and it's alright. Would have preferred the official one, but everywhere was charging a hefty price for importing it.

I already had a hefty battery pack for travelling. Haven't needed it much myself, but my partner recently made good use of it for an international flight.

[–] dracs 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I bought some gray imports a couple of months ago. Cost me about $100 more than Valve's official AU prices, for the 1TB OLED.

My partner and I have been playing them both pretty much constantly since then. Very happy with them.

[–] dracs 1 points 1 month ago

The UnifiedPush server is intended to be a single source your phone can keep a persistent connection open to, rather than needing a connection per service/app (this is how Google's Firebase notifications work too).

As Signal doesn't support UnifiedPush, MollySocket keeps a permanent connection open to Signal's servers to listen for new activity and forward them to your UnifiedPush server. This saves your phone keeping a permanent connection open to Signal's servers and draining your mobile battery more.

[–] dracs 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I'm self hosting both too. MollySocket's docs are pretty clear that it never gets an encryption key for your account, so it can't read your messages. It only gets/forwards alerts that something happened on your account AFAIK. So I'm not sure what data it has that's worth encrypting.

[–] dracs 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (4 children)

For Signal/Molly, it's less that the notification is encrypted as I understand it. It's more the notification content is just "Hey! Stuff happened" for Signal. The app then reaches out directly to the Signal servers to see what's new. So the message content is never sent via the push notification service (UnifiedPush or Google's service).

[–] dracs 9 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I've got a few old PCI cards around somewhere. I should pull one of them out and give them a try at this.

view more: next β€Ί