Frozen
1.2K posts


We’ve had access to an engineering sample of the new Framework Laptop 13 Pro for about a month ahead of the announcement, and our biggest takeaway is this: it finally feels like a genuinely premium Framework.
The first thing that stood out to us was the build quality. We (1/8)
Framework@FrameworkPuter
Our biggest breakthrough in efficiency yet, the Framework Laptop 13 Pro with 20 hours of battery life. In Graphite. Linux-first with options for Ubuntu pre-installed. Featuring Intel® Core™ Ultra Series 3 processors, LPCAMM2 Memory, a new haptic touchpad, and a touchscreen display. Pre-orders for the Framework Laptop 13 Pro open now: frame.work
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@heynavtoor How does this protect against a supply chain attack of a CLI package at all?
We're not talking about server compromission.
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LastPass was breached in 2022. Hackers stole the encrypted password vaults of 25 million users.
Then they started cracking them.
In January 2024, Ripple co-founder Chris Larsen lost $150 million in XRP to attackers who cracked his LastPass vault.
By December 2025, blockchain analysts at TRM Labs traced over $438 million in cryptocurrency thefts back to that single breach. LastPass paid $24.5 million to settle the class action.
Your passwords. Your credit cards. Your bank logins. Your crypto keys. Stored on a company's server. Breached. Downloaded. Cracked. Used against you. For years.
1Password: prices going up 33% starting March 2026.
Bitwarden Families: $47.88/year.
LastPass Premium: $36/year.
All of them store your vault on THEIR servers.
There is an open-source alternative. Your vault lives on YOUR server. Nobody else can access it. Nobody else can breach it. Nobody else can sell the encrypted backup to criminals.
It is called Vaultwarden. 58,700+ stars on GitHub.
A lightweight Rust implementation of the Bitwarden server API. It works with every official Bitwarden app. Browser extensions, mobile, desktop, CLI. You point them at your server instead of Bitwarden's cloud. That is it.
Here is what it does:
→ Full password vault. Logins, cards, identities, secure notes.
→ Works with every Bitwarden client. iOS, Android, Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Windows, Mac, Linux.
→ TOTP authenticator built in. No separate 2FA app needed.
→ Password sharing. Organizations, collections, roles, groups.
→ Emergency Access. Give a trusted person access if something happens to you.
→ Send. Share encrypted text or files with self-destructing links.
→ FIDO2, YubiKey, Duo, and Email 2FA.
→ AES-256 end-to-end encryption. Your master password never leaves your device.
→ Single Docker container. 50 MB of RAM at idle.
Here's the wildest part:
Bitwarden's official self-hosted server needs 11 separate Docker containers to run.
Vaultwarden is one container. One Rust binary. Less memory than a single Chrome tab.
All the premium features Bitwarden charges for are free on Vaultwarden. TOTP. Send. Emergency Access. Vault Health Reports. Organizations. All of it.
One of the active Vaultwarden maintainers is employed by Bitwarden and contributes on their own time.
Vaultwarden: $0. Unlimited users. All premium features. Runs on a $5 VPS. Runs on a Raspberry Pi.
2,700+ forks. 81 releases. 83% Rust. AGPL-3.0 license.
Your passwords. Your hardware. Your keys.
100% Open Source.
(Link in the comments)

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@MrReadman01 @ShowcaseWishes Considering the price, I wouldn't include it to avoid skewing what's available.
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@ShowcaseWishes hold on what about the screen that's in The Sphere in Vegas is that not considered a cinema screen even when they played the Wizard of Oz their.
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@American010170 @freedomschamp @lopp @Cloudflare This is drivel propagated by sales in cyber security. If the seed from the emitting server is compromised your 2fa is compromised too, it's not a private key.
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@freedomschamp @lopp @Cloudflare This absolutely defeats the purpose of 2FA, which is 2 of:
Something you know
Something you have
Something you are
Storing backup keys in online password managers consolidates the 2 factors into Something you Know.
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Nooooooooooooooo @Cloudflare; telling folks to store 2FA codes in their password manager defeats the purpose of 2FA!

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@freedomschamp @lopp @Cloudflare Finally I read someone who's aware of it, it's like everybody lost their mind. Even supposedly serious cyber firms.
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@lopp @Cloudflare No it doesn't defeat the purpose of 2FA. I don't know which retard came up with this. The reason 2FA was introduced in the first place was due to password reuse.
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@OG_Branxi @zoomerfied If you're in tether you have accepted asset seizure as a very real possibility.
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@zoomerfied give me a break already
every day there's a hack, a ban, or something getting blocked in crypto 😭
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Frozen أُعيد تغريده

@aaronjmars 1 of 1 sensor readings, that doesn't even account for malfunction.
People are fucking retarded.
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holy fuck, a hair dryer at a Paris airport broke Polymarket weather markets & made someone $34,000 richer
- polymarket was settling Paris temperature bets on a single Météo France sensor sitting near the Charles de Gaulle runway perimeter - basically unguarded
- the guy bought the long-shot outcome (like "22°C" when everyone expected 18°C) for pennies, since nobody thought it'd hit
- then he walked up to the probe and briefly heated the air around it with a portable heat source, spiking the reading just long enough to register as the daily max
- temperature snapped back to normal in minutes, the market resolved in his favor, and he cashed out - twice, on April 6 and April 15, before Météo France caught on and filed charges
hyperstitions.

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@zeroxjackson Idk what they did with the latest macOS but it made my M1MBA run like shit, it was perfect up until that.
I'm not gonna upgrade if that's how they play.
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@fabienpenso @airfrance fox13now.com/2014/12/29/uni…
>2014
I'm getting old, thought it was relatively recent.
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@fabienpenso @airfrance There was a guy in the US that ran a service to find these flights, he was on the news I think idk what happened next.
I think they shut him down.
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Lisbon → SFO via Paris: €800
Paris → SFO (same flights): €1,600
Same seat. Same plane. Same time. Double the price. At this point, it’s cheaper to leave Paris to… come back through it.
« Faire voler l'élégance toujours plus haut ».
@airfrance


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Frozen أُعيد تغريده

@oldstocky Every art form has its pareto principle, a top 3 things you have to get right to unlock 80% of the quality. For room design, lighting has to be one of it.
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@luciascarlet Yeah, I don't understand how only Apple has this native on their displays.
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did you know that if you have a desktop, you can probably control your monitor’s brightness from your computer, but your OS won’t let you because… fuck you?
there’s a standard called DDC/CI that’s been around FOREVER and is rather well-supported across monitors that allows hosts to send control signals, notably brightness, to the monitor
but most operating systems and desktop environments simply can’t be arsed to support this feature natively as it can unfortunately also be finicky at times, unless it’s a built-in (laptop) or first-party/“blessed” display (Studio Display etc.)
KDE Plasma has native DDC/CI support, but macOS and Windows don’t, although the Microsoft PowerToys team is working on a semi-official utility for this called PowerDisplay
on macOS, you can use BetterDisplay to control external monitor brightness

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@PowerPasheur L'expat est la meilleure solution. Qu'on me prouve le contraire et je feed une seed.
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