-> @haileys.quest
@blakes.dev
Of course having written in such detail about it, that means I'll never get around to building it. But I still think a keyboard and system command palette is the best way to interact with a computer. Lots of power and potential there alone, while still being able to transition back into CLI or […]
Original post on infosec.town
infosec.town
August 21, 2025 at 12:07 AM
Of course having written in such detail about it, that means I'll never get around to building it. But I still think a keyboard and system command palette is the best way to interact with a computer. Lots of power and potential there alone, while still being able to transition back into CLI or […]
I write a lot of technological mumbo jumbo and it never goes anywhere. I have no-one to blame but myself for this. I should take this idea under my wing and develop a proof-of-concept forked client, reference list server a la Chatmail Relay, and the relevant patches to Chatmail Core.
August 11, 2025 at 5:25 AM
I write a lot of technological mumbo jumbo and it never goes anywhere. I have no-one to blame but myself for this. I should take this idea under my wing and develop a proof-of-concept forked client, reference list server a la Chatmail Relay, and the relevant patches to Chatmail Core.
With a differing `From:` and `Reply-To:` header using proxy addresses, you can facilitate "protected" DMs, where it's gated by the server so you know how a given person was able to contact you, and the list server is able to reject it if it's unwanted¹. That's the preferred pattern, although […]
Original post on infosec.town
infosec.town
August 11, 2025 at 2:03 AM
With a differing `From:` and `Reply-To:` header using proxy addresses, you can facilitate "protected" DMs, where it's gated by the server so you know how a given person was able to contact you, and the list server is able to reject it if it's unwanted¹. That's the preferred pattern, although […]
Another thing I'm thinking about is how DeltaChat/chatmail could use the existing mailing-list model to facilitate larger groups. Hell, maybe a full blown replacement for Discord servers later down the line!
Something along the lines of, to join the group the user clicks a link or invite (which […]
Something along the lines of, to join the group the user clicks a link or invite (which […]
Original post on infosec.town
infosec.town
August 11, 2025 at 1:35 AM
Another thing I'm thinking about is how DeltaChat/chatmail could use the existing mailing-list model to facilitate larger groups. Hell, maybe a full blown replacement for Discord servers later down the line!
Something along the lines of, to join the group the user clicks a link or invite (which […]
Something along the lines of, to join the group the user clicks a link or invite (which […]
I'm toying with it in a chat with myself (another profile) and, for apps, it's nice that you can have, say, multiple calendars in a chat. But they're not labeled, so you'll just have Calendar (1 event), Calendar, Calendar (5 events)... some way to label apps in the list, maybe after the fact […]
Original post on infosec.town
infosec.town
August 11, 2025 at 1:14 AM
I'm toying with it in a chat with myself (another profile) and, for apps, it's nice that you can have, say, multiple calendars in a chat. But they're not labeled, so you'll just have Calendar (1 event), Calendar, Calendar (5 events)... some way to label apps in the list, maybe after the fact […]
Reposted by -> @haileys.quest
I'm toying with the idea of a "KeePassZ" which would be primarily for Windows 10/11 with modern Fluent design, to match and blend well with this system. I wonder if I can somehow set up a WASM plugin API, that other apps can implement.
August 3, 2025 at 1:23 AM
I'm toying with the idea of a "KeePassZ" which would be primarily for Windows 10/11 with modern Fluent design, to match and blend well with this system. I wonder if I can somehow set up a WASM plugin API, that other apps can implement.
I'm toying with the idea of a "KeePassZ" which would be primarily for Windows 10/11 with modern Fluent design, to match and blend well with this system. I wonder if I can somehow set up a WASM plugin API, that other apps can implement.
August 3, 2025 at 1:23 AM
I'm toying with the idea of a "KeePassZ" which would be primarily for Windows 10/11 with modern Fluent design, to match and blend well with this system. I wonder if I can somehow set up a WASM plugin API, that other apps can implement.
AuthPass lowkey sucks.
.kdbx is a pretty widely deployed format for password managers across all platforms. Having an implementation per platform is preferable; it means that each app is built to work very well with its platform. The thing that holds it down, like anything not centrally […]
.kdbx is a pretty widely deployed format for password managers across all platforms. Having an implementation per platform is preferable; it means that each app is built to work very well with its platform. The thing that holds it down, like anything not centrally […]
Original post on infosec.town
infosec.town
August 3, 2025 at 1:21 AM
AuthPass lowkey sucks.
.kdbx is a pretty widely deployed format for password managers across all platforms. Having an implementation per platform is preferable; it means that each app is built to work very well with its platform. The thing that holds it down, like anything not centrally […]
.kdbx is a pretty widely deployed format for password managers across all platforms. Having an implementation per platform is preferable; it means that each app is built to work very well with its platform. The thing that holds it down, like anything not centrally […]
AuthPass is written in a language & framework I'm extremely familiar with, so it's definitely on the table.
August 2, 2025 at 6:42 PM
AuthPass is written in a language & framework I'm extremely familiar with, so it's definitely on the table.
It might be technically possible to build one for the other. KPXC seems to be built in Qt, and I've seen Qt apps be built for Android (such as SDRAngel!). If KPDX uses Jetpack Compose, it might be possible to port it to desktop. But neither of them are designed for the other platform. So I have […]
Original post on infosec.town
infosec.town
August 2, 2025 at 6:36 PM
It might be technically possible to build one for the other. KPXC seems to be built in Qt, and I've seen Qt apps be built for Android (such as SDRAngel!). If KPDX uses Jetpack Compose, it might be possible to port it to desktop. But neither of them are designed for the other platform. So I have […]
Ideally, the KeePass implementation(s) I use would be open-source and cross-platform, so that I don't have to modify two separate programs to, for instance, add masked-email generation. The best ones out there, KeePassXC (desktop) and KeePassDX (Android) fulfill the first but not the second […]
Original post on infosec.town
infosec.town
August 2, 2025 at 6:33 PM
Ideally, the KeePass implementation(s) I use would be open-source and cross-platform, so that I don't have to modify two separate programs to, for instance, add masked-email generation. The best ones out there, KeePassXC (desktop) and KeePassDX (Android) fulfill the first but not the second […]
Not really sure what the distinction between the other two states would be, now that "done" is more distinct & intentional. I guess "opened" notifications (not Done, not snoozed) would have less emphasis, and wouldn't count towards the total (maybe just for a few hours, before reverting to […]
Original post on infosec.town
infosec.town
July 19, 2025 at 2:18 AM
Not really sure what the distinction between the other two states would be, now that "done" is more distinct & intentional. I guess "opened" notifications (not Done, not snoozed) would have less emphasis, and wouldn't count towards the total (maybe just for a few hours, before reverting to […]