Ken Hornstein wrote in <20231102175429.174f22e...@pb-smtp21.pobox.com>: ... |>I'm firmly planted in the Linux, MacOS, Windows, and Android worlds. |>So, my current calendar is a piece of paper on a clipboard that I always |>carry with me, LOL! I find it way more expedient to use the clipboard |>rather than try to have a to-do list app and a calendar app and remember |>which device I'm using at the time and figure out how to keep everything |>in sync. | |I mean, hey, whatever works for you ... but do you not have anyone |else who you need to share a calendar with? To me that is the other |key piece. If it's just you then you can get away with more analog |solutions. FWIW, _if_ you are willing to live in the Apple Universe |then the syncing just happens across all of your devices automatically. |I just don't think about it; I know that when I (or anyone else in |my household) add something to any device then soon-ish it will |automatically appear across all devices for everyone in my household.
The all-embedded RFC 7265 JCAL (plus JMAP etc) is surely the future for all of you. |>I really miss my old Windows phone, but I digress. Does Even the Fair Phone is only 70% fair i think. It is a disgrace. ... |Since you mentioned it ... what do other people use for password |management? I ended up using a solution called "Master Password" which |is an open-source password generator which is now called "Spectre" |(https://spectre.app) and has a reasonable paid app for mobile devices. |But I am wondering what other people do. Unfortunately no Yubikey/-alike thing yet, so i type my harddisk decryption key, then my password, then the password of an additional encfs filesystem, and then have a script which loads keys into ssh-agent aka provides decrypted versions for easy consumation (via copy+paste or so). The browser "container" which (actually) has passwords is special and also stores in such a one. (Also decrypted by that script.) Upon LID close etc all windows are slock(1)ed, all ssh-agents are cleared, all encfs volumes are unmounted. So next time i have to do it all again (less harddisk decryption). It sounds annoying. I am looking forward a bit for a cryptocard. (But NO! keys on smartphone, unless i buy myself a Pinephone; unfortunately there is no "PinePhone Pro with AlpineLinux" (even better CRUX), but a "normal" Linux and connectivity only via USB bus and thus USB-protocol restrained, that i could trust.) --steffen | |Der Kragenbaer, The moon bear, |der holt sich munter he cheerfully and one by one |einen nach dem anderen runter wa.ks himself off |(By Robert Gernhardt)