✓ Accepted Answer
To protect your privacy online the most impactful thing you can do is use a password manager. Most people reuse passwords across sites, which means one breach exposes everything. Bitwarden is excellent and free. 1Password is worth paying for.
Enable two-factor authentication everywhere you can, especially email, banking, and social media. Use an authenticator app (Google Authenticator or Authy) rather than SMS, since SMS can be intercepted.
For browsing, use Firefox or Brave instead of Chrome. Install uBlock Origin as an ad blocker — it blocks trackers, not just ads. Use DuckDuckGo instead of Google if privacy matters to you.
Be careful what you share on social media. Your date of birth, phone number, home city, and workplace are enough for identity theft. Review your privacy settings on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter regularly.
For sensitive communications, Signal is the gold standard for encrypted messaging.
by ethanwalker20893
· 68 upvotes
The difference between SSDs and HDDs matters a lot for everyday performance. An SSD (Solid State Drive) has no moving parts and accesses data almost instantly. An HDD (Hard Disk Drive) uses spinning magnetic platters and is much slower.
In practice, a computer with an SSD boots in under 15 seconds. The same machine with an HDD might take 1-2 minutes. Applications launch instantly on SSD versus several seconds on HDD. This difference is noticeable every single day.
HDDs are not useless though — they're much cheaper per gigabyte. A 4TB HDD costs around what a 500GB SSD costs. If you need bulk storage for videos, photos and backups, HDD makes sense.
Best setup if budget allows: a smaller SSD (256-512GB) for your operating system and main applications, and a large HDD for bulk storage. This gives you speed where it matters and capacity where you need it.
by thomasdavies57409
· 4 upvotes