Thanks for the video DJ. I do not have as much need for a Tails session OS, a VPN and frequently changing servers is probably more than I need for just not wanting people looking at what I do...but we really have to appreciate all the people that develop and continue to help protect our privacy.
I will consider Tails when there is a KDE version ;) Btw I have a Thinkpad running Heads firmware, the other side of Tails! And as it is just a payload on Coreboot, maybe I will get 2 more (my main) machines with it too!
I have a query. I am trying to compile a kernel for testing purposes. I don't want to add/install it to Linux grub, just want to compile & see how much time it takes to compile the kernel package So regarding my query, is there a way to monitor how much time it takes like some flag or option to be given before the compile command to know how much time it took to compile.
You can add a timex in front of the command you use to compile with it will give you the time it took from the time the commend starts until you return to the shell
DJ, when it comes to looking at future OSs, I'm starting to think that Qubes' approach of AppVMs makes sense in sustaining the ability to use them for long, even with new OSs coming to the scene. Do you have any thoughts on enabling the use of Apps for a long time?
So first I love Qubes, my problem with it is support for new hardware, it takes a very long time for Qubes to support new laptops (esp a problem for me) and I mean measure that in multiple years. So, if you have older laptops you want to use for Qubes, great it will serve you well. I am not sure what you mean by enabling the use of Apps for a long time, Qubes isn't designed to just leave them running, you bring them up when you need them and you exit them when you are done, so there shouldn't be anything left running when not in use, except dom 0, your network and firewall . Do you mean something else?
@@CyberGizmo Oh I mean something else. Think about preserving software and enabling their use for new generations of operating systems. Given the size of code today, if people develop new operating systems, expecting to port software written for older OSs to said new OSs is somewhat unpractical. Hence the paradigm that qubesOS has come up with, where a single app in a single VM is used, looks to me somewhat future-suitable in regards to this matter.
@@lale5767 Ahhh ok thanks for the clarification, Qubes dosn't launch a separate VM for each app, if its the same color they share one VM, so if you are thinling of separation you won't get it unless you install across the yellow or blue VM, each color is a different VM
If you use Tor, they only know you are using Tor, but they can't see anything you are doing, only the exit nodes of Tor know where the traffic is headed, and the exit nodes only know the middle tor node which handed them the message.
what I do to run tails is used medicat than it is a drag and drop play on tails i got in runing it 15 sec after you install medicat (medicat it free)☺ plus Qubes OS
if only Tor would working, but chinese Deep Packet Inspection equipment in other countries perfectly blocks snowflake and Tor althogether, so this is useless for me. The idea of bridges by email is so smelly like made by someone who collecting database of users.
@@DxBlack what? i really can't understand your sentence meaning. And how do you obtained this data? I'm not in China and not chinese, i specifically stated that many countries in the world bought this equipment made in China which really blocks it by DPI. Also they experimenting using it against other services, it blocks video feeds of TH-cam (kinda by TH-cam mistake which leave certain things unencrypted).
Thanks for the video DJ. I do not have as much need for a Tails session OS, a VPN and frequently changing servers is probably more than I need for just not wanting people looking at what I do...but we really have to appreciate all the people that develop and continue to help protect our privacy.
Excellent video 👍 Thank you 💜
Thank you
DJ Ware lived to tell the Tails!
no pun intended huh?
@@CyberGizmo Oops! I just realized the 'deeper' meaning. So I'd say no pun was intended!
Great information, thank you, :)
I will consider Tails when there is a KDE version ;)
Btw I have a Thinkpad running Heads firmware, the other side of Tails!
And as it is just a payload on Coreboot, maybe I will get 2 more (my main) machines with it too!
i2p is another option alternative to TOR
Yes it is
Not for tails though
👍And thanks again DJ!
I have a query. I am trying to compile a kernel for testing purposes. I don't want to add/install it to Linux grub, just want to compile & see how much time it takes to compile the kernel package
So regarding my query, is there a way to monitor how much time it takes like some flag or option to be given before the compile command to know how much time it took to compile.
You can add a timex in front of the command you use to compile with it will give you the time it took from the time the commend starts until you return to the shell
DJ, when it comes to looking at future OSs, I'm starting to think that Qubes' approach of AppVMs makes sense in sustaining the ability to use them for long, even with new OSs coming to the scene.
Do you have any thoughts on enabling the use of Apps for a long time?
So first I love Qubes, my problem with it is support for new hardware, it takes a very long time for Qubes to support new laptops (esp a problem for me) and I mean measure that in multiple years. So, if you have older laptops you want to use for Qubes, great it will serve you well. I am not sure what you mean by enabling the use of Apps for a long time, Qubes isn't designed to just leave them running, you bring them up when you need them and you exit them when you are done, so there shouldn't be anything left running when not in use, except dom 0, your network and firewall . Do you mean something else?
@@CyberGizmo Oh I mean something else. Think about preserving software and enabling their use for new generations of operating systems. Given the size of code today, if people develop new operating systems, expecting to port software written for older OSs to said new OSs is somewhat unpractical.
Hence the paradigm that qubesOS has come up with, where a single app in a single VM is used, looks to me somewhat future-suitable in regards to this matter.
@@lale5767 Ahhh ok thanks for the clarification, Qubes dosn't launch a separate VM for each app, if its the same color they share one VM, so if you are thinling of separation you won't get it unless you install across the yellow or blue VM, each color is a different VM
@@CyberGizmo whaaat... I've been reading lots of Joanna's blogs. Can't believe I missed this point.
Thanks for letting me know.
my isp is voxi through my mobile phone. Can Voxi see everywhere I visit etc if I use Tails on my pc ?
If you use Tor, they only know you are using Tor, but they can't see anything you are doing, only the exit nodes of Tor know where the traffic is headed, and the exit nodes only know the middle tor node which handed them the message.
what I do to run tails is used medicat than it is a drag and drop play on tails i got in runing it 15 sec after you install medicat (medicat it free)☺ plus Qubes OS
Heads you lose, Tails you win.
@@buteforce YES!
Is 2GB RAM for any amount of cores?
They id not specify cores, so not sure, I can tell you its pretty small footprint on that N97 box.
if only Tor would working, but chinese Deep Packet Inspection equipment in other countries perfectly blocks snowflake and Tor althogether, so this is useless for me. The idea of bridges by email is so smelly like made by someone who collecting database of users.
Stop using public snowflakes and this isn't an issue...far too many CN users on Tor for your claim to be true.
@@DxBlack what? i really can't understand your sentence meaning. And how do you obtained this data? I'm not in China and not chinese, i specifically stated that many countries in the world bought this equipment made in China which really blocks it by DPI. Also they experimenting using it against other services, it blocks video feeds of TH-cam (kinda by TH-cam mistake which leave certain things unencrypted).
dont see the use for it really