tmpod
- 47 Posts
- 264 Comments
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Portugal - Geral@lemmy.pt•Conseguem entender o português do Brasil?Português3·16 days agoSim, essa visão é comum. No meu caso, consigo compreender o sotaque do Português do Brasil com grande facilidade, mas as diferenças de vocabulário às vezes tramam-me. No sentido contrário, creio haver, na generalidade, uma maior dificuldade de compreensão do sotaque em si, além de uma barreira de vocabulário também.
Penso que essa dificuldade acrescida dos sotaques vem do facto de no Brasil se consumir muito Português do Brasil, tanto pelo grande volume de produções nacionais, como de produções estrangeiras dobradas. Em Portugal, comparativamente, consome-se muito mais multimédia noutras línguas ou dialetos, tendo a legendagem um papel muito mais relevante que a dobragem. É de notar também que em Portugal, a presença da variante brasileira é consideravelmente mais marcada que a presença da variante portuguesa (ou europeia) no Brasil.
PS: Como o Vilna já referiu, se escreveste isto sem a ajuda de um tradutor, parabéns :) Peço desculpa se a minha resposta tiver palavras ou expressões mais elaboradas! Se tiveres dúvidas, estou ao dispor.
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Have you ever cried over a celebrity or complete strangers death, why?5·20 days agoNot to the point of crying, but I’ve got really shaken by the deaths of strangers and public figures before. In general, any death moves me, it’s a very natural and human reaction. Unfortunately, some farther ones or those that happen often enough to get me numb don’t strike me as much.
An example of a fairly recent death that shook me and large amount of people too, was the death of Rick May, an immensely talented actor, drama teacher and more, that voiced the character “Soldier” in Team Fortress 2. His iconic and charismatic performance for that role is just indescribable, and a significant part of what made the character, and by extension the game, so good. His loss was so big that Valve added an in-game memorial statue, so that players could pay their respects. The fan community really grieved together. He passed away due to Covid-19 complications in 2020 at 79 years of age.
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Found some Firefox forks but can't decide which one to use1·20 days agoMullvad Browser isn’t bullet proof, it will not prevent fingerprinting entirely, though it makes it less reliable, especially if it isn’t sophisticated.
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Oniux: Kernel-level Tor network isolation for any Linux app3·20 days agoFinally! I had tried using the clunky torsocks not long ago and wondered why there was no namespace based solution yet. Glad to see this getting released, it will help many people. Tor ❤️
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobileEnglish7·21 days agoThis is quite misleading and frankly low effort. Besides the readability issues, the chart makes a clear distinction between Proton Pass and Bitwarden when it comes to privacy, citing their privacy policy.
As it happens, however, Proton’s server code is closed, unaudited[1] and not distributed, and the apps (web, Android and iOS) do not support setting different homeservers. This effectively means you cannot self-host your password manager and must be “locked” to Proton for what I consider to be one of the most fundamental and important pieces of technology a person can use.
Bitwarden, however, has opened their official C# server, their internal Rust SDK and the apps themselves too. Furthermore, they have several guides on how to self-host your own personal server, and have implemented settings in their apps to change the homeserver. There’s even an unofficial server, vaultwarden that is even better tailored for small, personal deployments.
All this to say: the fact they may collect some usage data on their website is very insignificant for their offering, in my opinion. The real value is in providing a secure vault that only the user can manage. If you need better privacy and/or anonymity, you should use tools specialized for that anyway, instead of blindly trusting a third-party’s Privacy Policy, no matter who they are. But then again, it’s the old game of threat models.
Ultimately, Bitwarden inspires more confidence than Proton, by giving those you can and want the ability to truly own their secrets.
As far as I’m aware, there’s only this audit by Cure53, in which they performed a white-box pen test on the API, with only its documentation provided, no code whatsoever. These audits are important from a cybersecurity point of view, but security is not the same as privacy and should not be taken as such. ↩︎
Very useful, even for someone who has been using Linux for many years. Sometimes you just forget or need that tool you rarely use.
tldr
can be much handier than parsing a man page when you’re in a pinch.I use the tealdeer implementation, but any is fine really.
tmpod@lemmy.ptto Linux@lemmy.ml•Is there any way to un-freeze my device when it freezes, without shutting down and losing my work?51·6 months agoNever knew about prelockd, seems like a pretty neat and useful idea, thanks!
I’m either being very dense right now, or I don’t have that o.I How is it called, or where is it located next to?
Wait what? Was there ever an option to open a private tab as a normal tab?? 🤔 I’d love to have that, but thought it would never get added. What version were you on before (and in which one are you now)?
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Portugal - Geral@lemmy.pt•Viaverde - Está na hora de desistir?Português11·7 months agoSegundo a página da adesão no site da ViaVerde, há um plano de 0,52€ que dá para as autoestradas apenas (não sei se bastaria para ti) e que pelos vistos já inclui o identificador.
Adding onto what’s already on the thread, you can try look at the newer Element Call, which is an implementation of Matrix’s native calls.
I’ve been using it a bit recently, since Jitsi seems to have stopped working reliably for me (to be frank, I’ve not put much effort into debugging it yet). It works well, but it’s still early stage, lacking some features Jitsi has. If that one works for you, I recommend you stick to it.
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Portugal - Geral@lemmy.pt•Está a chegar um bilhete universal para andar de comboio na União Europeia2·7 months agoPá, ultimamente tenho andado mais de comboio (principalmente IC Linha do Norte, com o Passe Ferroviário Verde) e a sensação que tenho é que há muitos atrasos (variando entre meros 5m e 30m) devido a obras nas linhas. Até esses trabalhos estarem concluídos, não se pode esperar muito da pontualidade dos transportes.
Depois tb há a questão dos horários, não sei como são feitos, mas parece-me que há bastante espaço para melhorias. Há uns tempos ouvi falar que trabalhavam com uma tal SISCOG, empresa portuguesa. Fui ao site deles mas não aparecia a CP. No entanto, fiquei bastante bem impressionado ao ver nomes como o Metro de Londres, os Comboios Holandeses e outros (Metro de Lisboa tb).
tmpod@lemmy.ptto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Element X, Call and Server Suite are production ready9·9 months agoI still don’t think it’s there, but development hss been fast, so a lot has changed and improved in the last couple of months.
tmpod@lemmy.ptto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Element X, Call and Server Suite are production ready5·9 months agoNot exactly. Matrix 2.0 relates to the protocol (Matrix) version, which has its major number incremented due to a bunch of, well, major changes/updates to make it much better. OIDC, sliding sync and native calls are some of the new things that comprise the 2.0 update.
The server implementations are somewhat orthogonal to this. Synapse (the original Python server) is still the main implementation, and is Matrix 2.0 ready.
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is your favourite open source software that you discovered in the past year, that you can no longer live without?2·9 months agoconduwuit is a fork of the less “energic” conduit.rs software, and both are maintained by the community, not by the Element people, like Dendrite.
Agree, but mad props to the Gentoo people too. Nice community and incredible wiki as well.
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Is there such a thing as a privacy driven credit card?2·10 months agoYeah withdraw cash from an ATM and use it. The system sucks, but it’s not trivial to change for a myriad of reasons.
tmpod@lemmy.ptMto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Is there such a thing as a privacy driven credit card?3·10 months agoThere’s no real way to do it. Unless you know someone who can trade you XMR<->cash and you somehow convince your employer to (break laws and) pay you in those forms, you can’t avoid it. At some point, you’ll have to get money on a real bank account, which requires real information to open.
Ah sim, bem observado. O Português de Portugal é bem mais fechado que o do Brasil, que acaba por ser mais “melódico”. Aliás, é comum estrangeiros acharem que pt-PT se assemelha muito a línguas eslavas (Russo, Ucraniano, etc) foneticamente, que vem, pelo menos em parte, dessa forma mais fechada de pronunciar as palavras.