I would say my financial tracking document.
Also a music file I listen to everyday
Indirectly, but the
.bash_aliases
file that has all my terminal shortcutsI don’t have this problem because I use Windows snorts
Why not use fish though?
Sad blub
Not including work devices - probably my old university files. I intentionally wrote about topics relevant to the career I wanted (which I now have) and they’re genuinely useful for going back and referring to.
My collection of .EXE files out of which the most important is the one i use daily.
Pictures of my dogs who passed away a couple years ago.
mullvad.exe
/usr/bin/ssh
Spreadsheet template for paying bills.
Probably my tmux config. Using tmux has saved my butt so many times.
Going back to default tmux feels so wrong. I’ve got a bastard config that comes from muscle memory from starting with GNU screen with a dash of i3 sensibilities
vmlinuz
/bin/zsh
I have a triangular file I use for sharpening all my saws, super useful. I have some old saws.
The Excelsheet that tells me how long I have to work on Friday to get my 40 hours in.
Op’s password.
Dammit, I knew
69
was gonna get me in trouble one-uh-these-daysIt’s
hunter2
, isn’t it?I thought it was the same as his luggage, 12345?
passwords.kdbx
id_rsa
something something RSA keys aren’t as secure as the more modern cyphers
Somthing somthing what should i be using for ssh
ED25519 keys are what I use. Some people are wary of them because the NSA made some contributions to the algorithm’s development, but I don’t personally see it as an issue. If it bothers you, there are other popular ciphers that are still more secure than RSA.
I do something similar except I have my own cryptic way of writing my passwords that only I understand. I will never trust an outside source with my passwords ever. EVERYTHING gets hacked at some point…
Well if they can hack into my computer escape the hypervisor and then brute force the decryption key they deserve my passwords. I use qubes btw.
My daily work notes.