ng?
Only that kmail insisted on breaking the link... let's hope it doesn't this
time.
(Not every mail client implements flowing text correctly, which is why having
the client insert line breaks is the safer variant for readability. However...)
--
PD Dr. Andreas K. Huettel
Institute for Exp
>
> Can you swap the readers between the two computers and see if the
> problem follows the suspected-bad reader?
>
Possible as last resort, I'd rather figure this out some other way though.
--
PD Dr. Andreas K. Huettel
Institute for Experimental and Applied Physics
University o
nd
> Android (version 10 and 11) phones and tablets.
> Suggestions welcome.
> Thanks.
> Dave.
>
> ___
> Gnupg-users mailing list
> Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
> http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
--
PD Dr. Andrea
Am Mittwoch, 17. März 2021, 09:48:58 CET schrieb Werner Koch:
> On Tue, 16 Mar 2021 23:25, Andreas K. Huettel said:
> > 3) then, sign something: pinentry window pops up, pin is not accepted
> > ("wrong beep")
>
> We need a log from the scdaemon.
Here's the crit
Am Mittwoch, 17. März 2021, 21:07:16 CET schrieb Andreas K. Huettel:
>
> I'm pretty sure they didnt have different versions, sorry.
> (I rebooted the machine a few minutes earlier because of a kernel update.)
>
OK now it's getting very strange.
On a second PC with the same rea
Am Mittwoch, 17. März 2021, 20:52:26 CET schrieb Klaus Ethgen:
> Hi Andreas,
>
> Am Mi den 17. Mär 2021 um 16:31 schrieb Andreas K. Huettel:
> > Am Mittwoch, 17. März 2021, 09:48:58 CET schrieb Werner Koch:
> > > On Tue, 16 Mar 2021 23:25, Andreas K. Huettel said:
> &g
Hi all,
so here's a question that I'm sure people here have already been thinking
about... Like probably many others here I have a gpg smartcard with three
subkeys Sign, Encrypt, Authenticate, and an offline Certify master key at a
safe
place.
* If I want to let my Signature subkey expire
[changing the subject since this is quite a different topic]
> What I would like to know how people handle the case when a SmardCard gets
> lost, broken or maybe confiscicated at an Airport etc.?
Well, that's the argument for having at least primary/cert key and encryption
subkey not *only* on
Dear all,
I'd appreciate some advice. I recently returned back from a year abroad to my
trusted hardware, and it seems an upgrade of gpg in the meantime broke things.
Setup:
* OpenPGP card with S, E, A subkeys; using both gnupg and ssh with the card
* SPR532 USB card reader with pinpad