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Rockbox_screen.png - 15.45 KB (220x176)

hello, I have a hifiwalker H2 and I tried to rockbox my thing but I failed and I don't understand the step. it's too confusing for me. can someone help me please. my hifiwalker h2 version is v2 cry

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please someone help me


4chan.png - 19.85 KB (634x229)

Thoughts on 4chan's source code? https://github.com/4chan-org/4chan

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>>1699 How lewd! surprised

Your fortune: You become a big beautiful woman with big tits and small pink nipples.

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>>1247 I loved how the spam filter was just regex and very bad regex at that.

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Have any imageboards used it yet? I know there was this one called Dizzychan that was set up as a test but as expected it died within a week.

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>>1703 There's basically zero interest because it's so outdated you need a server with very old repos so outside of a curiosity there's no reason to make one

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They took it down. I wanted to see inside. Like what makes 4chan tick.

Your fortune: Good Luck


5285.jpg - 28.93 KB (600x356)

Do you currently own a botnet?


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Since Windows 10 is reaching its End of Life, what's the best Linux distro to use? I was thinking of Linux Mint possibly but I want to see if any Hikarins had any better suggestions

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>>1690 What if my processor is too weak to compile everything

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6e86a379240c6af14d1e710f7f4ce3b95afd4941.jpg - 1404.71 KB (2916x3889)

>>1691 You can use binary packages for heavy stuff.

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Debil_PNG (5448).png - 306.71 KB (612x716)

>>1692 What if I'm retarded?

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ghostbsd

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>>1676 Depends on how good you are with computers already and how much you want to learn. If you just want to use it casually and avoid most of the learning (which I dont think you should do but your call) then go with something like Mint, if you do want to learn about it then either go EndeavourOS if you want an easy start or Arch if you also want to learn how to manually install linux. Gentoo is great but I think it could be a bit overwhelming if you are used to just clicking .exe files. After a lot of Gentoo I switched to NixOS because I have many computers and Im lazy.


1757068061976.jpeg - 14.95 KB (318x159)

So here is a list I created of basic digital privacy tools to consider using in the current landscape. Web Browsers: Firefox: A trusted, open-source browser known for its commitment to privacy. LibreWolf: A privacy-focused, Mozilla-based browser with enhanced security features. Brave: A privacy-first browser that blocks ads and trackers by default. Private Search Engines: MyAllSearch: A UK-based search engine offering privacy with no cookies or tracking. DuckDuckGo: A widely-used, US-based search engine that prioritizes anonymity. SwissCows: A privacy-driven search engine leveraging secure Swiss infrastructure. Qwant: A French-based metasearch engine with a focus on privacy and safe browsing. MetaGer: A German-based, open-source metasearch engine offering privacy and a variety of helpful tools. Password Managers: Bitwarden: An open-source, secure password manager with both free and premium options. 1Password: A robust password manager with top-tier security and cross-platform compatibility. Dashlane: A premium password manager featuring a wealth of privacy-focused tools. Note: While LastPass is a popular choice, it has experienced multiple security breaches in recent years. VPN (Virtual Private Network): NordVPN: A reliable VPN service offering strong encryption and a large server network. Surfshark: A budget-friendly VPN with a solid privacy policy and a wide array of features. Mullvad: A privacy-centric VPN that has passed no-logs audits, ensuring your anonymity. ProtonVPN: A secure VPN provider from Switzerland with a strict no-logs policy. ExpressVPN: A leading VPN service that has undergone multiple no-logs audits and security assessments. Secure Email Services: StartMail: A secure email provider offering burner aliases and end-to-end encryption. ProtonMail: A Swiss-based email service renowned for its zero-access encryption. Mailfence: A customizable, secure email provider with full encryption and privacy features.

(GET A LOAD OF THIS GUY)
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Some others you're missing: Mullvad Browser- firefox with secure defaults, operated by Mullvad team. KeepassXC- password manager, can sync database between devices with something like Syncthing. Tutanota- mail service out of Switzerland, supports encryption and auto-deletes accounts after a period of inactivity.

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1000020513.png - 208.11 KB (627x885)

Respectfully hikarin, this list is pretty surface level and many of the options listed are objectively inferior. >duckduckglow >youtuber shilled vpns >proprietary password managers >le meme lion browser Cmon now.

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Screenshot from 2025-09-06 03-30-55.png - 537.28 KB (817x867)

>>1687 Surfshart, Nord, DuckDuckGlow, Brave opinion discarded


c29bb6b91c43861e3a6e41ab8eaf44a77293cd14d6ae1a062ac5fcb664cdf11d.png - 662.08 KB (850x607)

What was your first Linux distro? Over a decade ago, on my shitty vista laptop, I flashed Gentoo on to it, because people said it was best to start with in a chatroom I was in... I ended up figuring it out somehow though.

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>>49 I'm on mint right now

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>>1331 Alpine Linux

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My first one was Mint, now I use Void. (1337 get)

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A get deserving to be taken by a voidfag

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>>48 Did they tell you to install gentoo


d520f13b29806492f91b93b9f21ee5c959e30509141a5fd00fa412faed92063b.jpeg - 8.73 KB (225x225)

I've been wanting to switch from pidgin to a different irc capable client, preferably an open source one but not necessary. Which ones do you guys use?

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irssi for cli

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What's up with pidgin?

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>>1260 i use Hexchat with the Monokai theme. works well enough for me.

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>>1260 betterbird gets irc working well

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>>1260 halloy is comfy imho


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Recently at DebianConference '25, a convicted handholdingual predator. According to court documents, before he was eighteen, Jeremy Bicha committed "thousands of assaults". In response to the criticism of hosting a child predator while policing the political opinions of other contributors, they removed anyone from their channels who mentioned the topic. How do you feel about this situation?

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Gay Nazi Offensive Moronic Enthusiasts laugh

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>>1584 this guy looks like someone who would molest people ngl

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>>1584 molestors' presence only prove that the distro is secure and good. if its not good then molestors won't be there, no? >>1589 physiognomy hasn't failed humanity yet.

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fucking chimp face

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makes you wonder why debian names their releases after toy story characters


image.png - 131.88 KB (1611x943)

hey Hikarins. i want to talk about alternative browsers: which ones you like, which ones you dislike, which ones you think are interesting, whatever. we all know about Ungoogled Chromium, Librewolf and Pale Moon, so although discussion of those browsers is fine, i really wanna see some niche stuff. bonus points for browsers that function on the modern web or browsers that have weird designs or usecases. this is also a good opportunity to talk about projects that push away from Google's domination of the browser market through Chromium and their proxy Mozilla. my browser to start this thread is Basilisk. used to be owned by the Male Poon team but now is independent. runs a similar codebase to PM but has some modern technologies like WebRTC and such. from what i can tell it seems to function fine as a modern browser, and although it's lacking in extensions/themes it has the necessities like adblock, userscripts, etc. i'd consider this as pretty independent from Google/Mozilla as far as functioning browsers go since the codebase is based on old Firefox.

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I've been using Tor Browser more than a decade with scripts disabled. You can do that nowadays by setting the default security level to "safest" through the shield icon in the browser bar. I don't really know what else is out there but this is what I use, and this is what I recommend everyone else to use as well.

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1000020471.jpg - 537.03 KB (850x1217)

>>1661 >>1662 Thanks for the insight hikarin. I agree that Firefox is generally the best bet to be usable on the modern web, but it's nice to dream about a less shitty version of the modern web sometimes. Sucks that Pale Moon threw away their credibility to be furry spergs. A bit unrelated, but do you have much experience with alternative webs? Things like Gopher, Gemini, Freenet, IPFS, etc? I like the idea of them and absolutely see the appeal but from my (limited) experience they're a bit too niche and often too limited to have much content. My idealistic cope fever dream is all the people of the "dissident web" (for lack of a better term) who use IRC and altchans and such to migrate off the clearweb into some sort of alternative internet protocol(s) but I know that will not happen. cry

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>>1666 I've been using gopher since before http took off. It's pretty nice. But hardly anyone hosts content on it. Freenet I've tried but I'm not really in a position to say whats on the network. Same for Gemini. Isn't Gemini the one that requires you load javashit and have to host the content of the pages you browse? I can't remember why but I stopped using it. I think it was because of pizza spam. IPFS I really like but the developers refuse to fix basic things about it like the fact that you have to store data in the datastore and on your local HDD. Meaning for every TB you give it you have to have 2TB. There is an option to prevent this but it has been broken for many years. Another big issue with IPFS is it really taxes your router/modem. I was running it for a week and it murdered my LAN. The router got so hot that it was shutting down due to the thousands of requests it was getting a second. The network is really unstable because of that. But I do like the idea in theory. The main issue with it is the developers and their attempts to turn it into yet another crypto scam instead of a real free encrypted network for data. They have many long time bugs they simply refuse to fix. Instead they've been courting big tech companies and trying to get them to use the software. They're going after the tech bro investment money instead of making something for everyone to use for free. Another big problem is new p2p protocols aren't taking off because users refuse to donate bandwidth+space. They're opting to use things like private torrent trackers instead. Which are stupid. I refuse to engage with those people because they're bad actors and don't follow the spirit of hacker ethics. They don't care about the data being free for everyone. All they care about is clout and money.

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>>1669 you're wrong hikarin, gemini is basically just postmodern gopher with markdown instead of gopher syntax... and mandatory encryption

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>>1669 >>1670 I think that Hikarin is thinking of Hyphanet (Formerly known as Freenet).


a634f7ef700557c387b250b47c76def81c1a81656affa1731c475b99650f3371.png - 399.78 KB (500x653)

What's your text editor of choice? Vim for me

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>>1617 Emacs does not have any of that "inside" of it. It is not a text editor that that fell to scope creep, but instead a Lisp interpreter/VM. As a side effect it provides a fully mutable environment which has resulted in the creation of many Lisp programs, some of these come packaged with Emacs, and the user may run or delete these programs as he sees fit.

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>>1625 I love emacs key bindings. I use them for everything. They're faster once you get the hang of it and move ctrl to CAPS. I can't stand modal editing. I use vi fairly often but I avoid it and use emacs whenever possible. Emacs has become my entire OS for the most part. I only leave it to use Firefox and a couple of other applications. If I can do something in Emacs I try to. I made a manga reader for it in about 20 lines of lisp because the one I was using was so annoying and pulled it so many other things. I was using emacs as my window manager for a long time. It was okay. But had some quirks I didn't want to live with. So now I'm back on dwm with emacs loading as a daemon when I log-in. It's pretty comfy.

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>>1660 If you ever want a simple in and out vi-like experience in the terminal but emacs style, you might enjoy mg. I use that when I want super user privileges without having to use TRAMP.

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ee and nano

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>>1665 Yeah mg is part of my OS I use it pretty often. I only use vi on remote machines where I can't install software.


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