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vxlabs.com | ||
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thomascfoulds.com
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| | | | | Encrypted email can be tricky to set up, especially when your private key is stored on a smartcard like the Nitrokey. | |
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passingcuriosity.com
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| | | | | Setup a new Yubikey with, add OpenPGP keys, and configure git and GitHub to use them. | |
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stafwag.github.io
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| | | | | In previous blog posts, we discussed setting up a GPG smartcard on GNU/Linux and FreeBSD. In this blog post, we will configure Thunderbird to work with an external smartcard reader and our GPG-compatible smartcard. Before Thunderbird 78, if you wanted to use OpenPGP email encryption, you had to use a third-party add-on such as https://enigmail.net/. Thunderbird's recent versions natively support OpenPGP. The Enigmail addon for Thunderbird has been discontinued. See: https://enigmail.net/index.php/en/home/news. I didn't find good documentation on how to set up Thunderbird with a GnuPG smartcard when I moved to a new coreboot laptop, so this was the reason I created this blog post series. | |
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www.unixdigest.com
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| | | [AI summary] The article provides a step-by-step guide on setting up a riced desktop environment on FreeBSD, specifically focusing on the basic configuration. It covers setting up the system with a tiling window manager like i3, configuring keyboard layouts and UTF-8 settings, installing necessary packages, and preparing the environment for further desktop customization. | ||