[lug] Fedora 27!

stimits at comcast.net stimits at comcast.net
Wed Jan 3 19:28:07 MST 2018


I don't do much in the way of things like online banking (if someone wants to give me lots of free money I will), but if I ever have concern I just create another user and remove that UID/GID from most any access. I don't really need it, but if desired, I'd even set SElinux to further restrict that user.
 
----- Original Message -----From: Davide Del Vento <davide.del.vento at gmail.com>To: Boulder (Colorado) Linux Users Group -- General Mailing List <lug at lug.boulder.co.us>Sent: Thu, 04 Jan 2018 02:17:07 -0000 (UTC)Subject: Re: [lug] Fedora 27!

Using just a separate user for banking is the poor's man version of this. Of course not as isolated as a separate machine or even a virtual machine, but still decently isolated. 

On Wed, Jan 3, 2018 at 6:56 PM, Bear Giles <bgiles at coyotesong.com> wrote:


How could I not mention that a Raspberry pi is a logical extreme example of this. Only do your banking via a pi. Otherwise lock it up somewhere.




On Wed, Jan 3, 2018 at 6:45 PM, Bear Giles <bgiles at coyotesong.com> wrote:


I have to toss in a word for using virtualbox instead of spare partitions for this. It can be a bit of a pain if you require signed kernel modules but with the guest additions you can resize the virtual desktop to cover your full screen and get a good feel for it. There's probably a modest performance hit - but you can have a dozen virtual systems that you quickly flip between (or even run concurrently!) instead of a single partition that you have to manually reloading it every time.

The other benefit is that you can use a dedicated virtual machine for porn to reduce the risk of malware.

BANKING!

BANKING! I meant to type 'BANKING', not 'porn'. Geez, you guys have your mind in the gutter.

It's one of the standard bits of advice that even I often don't bother to follow - create a virtualbox image with a stripped down browser and only use it to access banking sites. The odds that malware will make it onto that browser are low.

You can extend this logic to a few other categories of sites. My AWS stuff should probably go in a virtualbox sandbox. My social media, such as it is, should also go into one.




On Tue, Jan 2, 2018 at 8:06 PM, Michael J. Hammel <mjhammel at graphics-muse.org> wrote:
XFce has a nice desktop settings panel that allows easy control of font

type and size for most of the UI.  Some apps don't quite follow the

settings but most GTK+ apps do. XFce is GTK2 based and I generally only

use GTK+ apps, not KDE/Qt.  I use XFce on Fedora 26 and CentOS 7.  I've

used it on Ubuntu at a job for a little while till we were lucky enough

to switch to Debian instead (and I switched back to Fedora).

Between XFce's desktop settings and a gnome-terminal (not the XFce

terminal, which isn't quite as easy to configure for my needs) I can

control font sizes for most of my work quite easily.

On Tue, 2018-01-02 at 19:42 -0700, Davide Del Vento wrote:

> Mint MATE (that is, Gnome 2). It has the plain ole "appearance" icon

> in the plain ole "control panel". In the appearance settings, there's

> a plain ole "font" tab where you can select type, style and size of

> the font for applications, document, desktop, window title and fixed

> width (e.g. terminal)

> You can also pick the rendering style with monochrome (useless unless

> you have a monochrome display), best shape, best contrast or subpixel

> smoothing

>

> On Tue, Jan 2, 2018 at 3:40 PM, <stimits at comcast.net> wrote: > > So although I'm only asking about opinions, let me ask from a new

> > point of view not normally asked: What newer distributions

> > (implying a recent kernel) have people here tried where you thought

> > you could set up fonts and readability without great trouble? Which

> > distributions did you find complete, yet still configurable for

> > visual customization (especially if your eyes are not so great)?--

Michael J. Hammel <mjhammel at graphics-muse.org>

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