Can you give some examples for the claim that most of the attacks don't make it upstream?
My gut tells me that, yes, mostly binaries have been compromised. But I am sure you have some real-world examples proving the point.
OpenDesk is basically a huge helm file that configures the individual apps.
Given enough RAM it should be rather simple to deploy.
You can start right away, there is a community edition:
https://gitlab.opencode.de/bmi/opendesk/deployment/opendesk
I am surprised that no one criticized kernel architecture as base for a secure mobile OS, yet.
Let me heat up the discussion using this quote
> The Linux kernel has atrocious security. It has an anti-security architecture, implementation and culture. The Linux kernel is not a good base for building any new operating system with a focus on privacy and security
> business logic and http status codes
Why hold this custom mapping in our working memory? It's better to abstract away your business details from the HTTP transfer protocol, and return self-descriptive codes directly in the response body:
{ "code": "jwt_has_expired" }
While the logic behind it sounds reasonable, REST does the exact opposite with the same goal: simplicity, easy to learn, i.e. reduce mental load.
I know there are other reasons for REST/SOAP/Graphql, etc.
Still makes mental load a somewhat subjective matter to me.
A bought several chromcasts pver the years, mainly because they provide a simple and uniform way to retrofit multi-room sound into my collection of sound systems from different brands an eras.
Surprised not to see more comments on this topic here.
Yes, video streaming can be done easily nowadays. But finding a multi-room audio solution that works across different brands and also on offline devices was my main reason for getting into chromcast.