There's no such thing as a fully secure system.
But does it have Vim keybindings?
Not only are the labels shifted by more than 50 percentage points, the scales are slightly different too, meaning not even the slope of the lines can be compared. "How to lie while telling the truth, with figures"
Interesting, I guess I understood that wrong. Looks like no "easy" interop, but it's there if you really need it and don't mind the extra work. I've been playing with this and trying to convert a ~20 line helper script…
Yup.
It looks like it can! http://www.scala-native.org/en/latest/user/interop.html >Scala Native provides an interop layer that makes it easy to interact with foreign native code. This includes C and other languages that can…
Well, this is just targeting a different VM, LLVM instead of the JVM. You get easy interop with all LLVM languages with this, including C.
The encryption tools you are using are written by people, and can have bugs. Being careless and blindly trusting them can get you into trouble.
Absolutely, but having another layer blocking access to your data is definitely a good thing. It's a good idea to encrypt your files yourself before uploading them to a public cloud.
Saying "nobody cares" about your data is not a good security policy.
While interesting, this seems like a bad idea. You're uploading your backups, no matter how encrypted, to a place where they will be publicly available to download.
There's no such thing as a fully secure system.
But does it have Vim keybindings?
Not only are the labels shifted by more than 50 percentage points, the scales are slightly different too, meaning not even the slope of the lines can be compared. "How to lie while telling the truth, with figures"
Interesting, I guess I understood that wrong. Looks like no "easy" interop, but it's there if you really need it and don't mind the extra work. I've been playing with this and trying to convert a ~20 line helper script…
Yup.
It looks like it can! http://www.scala-native.org/en/latest/user/interop.html >Scala Native provides an interop layer that makes it easy to interact with foreign native code. This includes C and other languages that can…
Well, this is just targeting a different VM, LLVM instead of the JVM. You get easy interop with all LLVM languages with this, including C.
The encryption tools you are using are written by people, and can have bugs. Being careless and blindly trusting them can get you into trouble.
Absolutely, but having another layer blocking access to your data is definitely a good thing. It's a good idea to encrypt your files yourself before uploading them to a public cloud.
Saying "nobody cares" about your data is not a good security policy.
While interesting, this seems like a bad idea. You're uploading your backups, no matter how encrypted, to a place where they will be publicly available to download.