ok, here it is: ssh-rsa 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 ginger@gingerbox
# $OpenBSD: sshd_config,v 1.103 2018/04/09 20:41:22 tj Exp $
# This is the sshd server system-wide configuration file. See
# sshd_config(5) for more information.
# This sshd was compiled with PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
# The strategy used for options in the default sshd_config shipped with
# OpenSSH is to specify options with their default value where
# possible, but leave them commented. Uncommented options override the
# default value.
Include /etc/ssh/sshd_config.d/*.conf
Protocol 2
Also recommendation: if you ever generate a new SSH key, make it an ed25519 with a password on the private key. Shorter key, more secure, and even if your privkey is leaked it's no big deal
you know maybe when my first laptop that i mostly used as a desktop got a hideously bloated battery, maybe i should have not done that with my next laptop
how attached are you to specifically the neopronouns because if you're at least more comfortable with they/them than with he/him then that might be a "safer" option
yeah that was brought up when I mentioned this elsewhere let me copy/paste my response
> no, I know from experience that depending on the day it can still feel wrong I will reïterate that he/him, she/her and they/them are not necessarily wrong for me, but my preference varies day to day. xe/xem is always okay, but the others aren’t.
> nah, unfortunately not for me. It often feels impersonal for that exact reason: you’re just using it as the default; it feels like you don’t actually know my pronouns.
So they/them is safe to use for people whose pronouns you don't know
Gonna be honest, sometimes I use he or she for people without having confirmation because they get confused when I say they and odds are I guessed correctly
@lyxal because it’s a separate syllable from the preceding vowel. Same thing with coöperate and less commonly reëlect (though I might just hyphenate that one instead)
One of my worst nightmares is getting surgery, having the paralyzing thing kick in but not the pain-removing or going-to-sleep thing so you're screaming internally but can't tell the doctor
@user they don't sell replacements automatically and it's a pain in the ass to get the right screwdrivers so whether or not it turns out i bought the extended care thing i'll probably have to phyisically send the whole laptop in for repairs
what, thats how they make these pronouns? they be like, damn not enough pronouns lets make more cuz why not, in fact everyone can interpret the pronoun any which way they want to, its exactly like algebraic substitution x y z, yay for everyone
oh fun fact, written chinese can opt in to gendered third person pronouns because for some reason somone thought stealing that from english or portuguese was a good idea
Liu Bannong (traditional Chinese: 劉半農; simplified Chinese: 刘半农; May 29, 1891 – July 14, 1934) or Liu Fu (劉復; 刘复) was a Chinese poet and linguist. He was a leader in the May Fourth Movement. He made great contributions to modern Chinese literature, phonology and photography.
== Life ==
A son of the educator Liu Baoshan, Liu Bannong was born in Jiangyin, Jiangsu Province, China. In 1912, he moved to Shanghai and in 1916, his work debuted in New Youth, the most influential journal of the May Fourth New Culture Movement. His essay “My Views on the Change of Written Chinese,” published in the May 1917...
I was mildly delirious a few hours ago and managed to type up what is not entirely unlike a sci-fi story. Problem is, it's part of a serious assignment, and the "story" is a single sentence that takes up an entire page. Should I leave it at is or should i remove it?
@AidenChow Yeah (unless it's an ad ig)
My brain says I should remove it but my heart says no