rsync can be run in cygwin.
For Linux, dm-crypt/LUKS for full-disk encryption (this is already the default on many distros) and eCryptfs for less complete or individual file/directory encryption.
> Open hardware Nope. Its i7 cpu is definitely not what I would consider open hardware. So then what's the point of this? If there's nothing 'libre' about most of the hardware inside then it's just a normal i7 laptop…
> Putting a python game on a phone is definitely more of a problem Not necessarily. kivy[1] is an alternative to pygame (for desktop builds, it uses pygame/sdl under the hood iirc) but it supports exporting to android…
Care to elaborate about that? I don't see the security concern if the data is encrypted on disk and both ways over the network. I doubt they would just leave the private keys to hang out on the server for anyone to take.
rsync can be run in cygwin.
For Linux, dm-crypt/LUKS for full-disk encryption (this is already the default on many distros) and eCryptfs for less complete or individual file/directory encryption.
> Open hardware Nope. Its i7 cpu is definitely not what I would consider open hardware. So then what's the point of this? If there's nothing 'libre' about most of the hardware inside then it's just a normal i7 laptop…
> Putting a python game on a phone is definitely more of a problem Not necessarily. kivy[1] is an alternative to pygame (for desktop builds, it uses pygame/sdl under the hood iirc) but it supports exporting to android…
Care to elaborate about that? I don't see the security concern if the data is encrypted on disk and both ways over the network. I doubt they would just leave the private keys to hang out on the server for anyone to take.