It installs the packages directly from the respective github repos
Or you mean vetting the apps themselves and not the packages?
It installs the packages directly from the respective github repos
Or you mean vetting the apps themselves and not the packages?
I don’t see it on F-Droid or Izzy’s repositories yet.
Obtainium (Get android app updates directly from the source) https://f-droid.org/packages/dev.imranr.obtainium.fdroid/
is handy for cases like these
This is what I’ve been missing the most since switching to Wayland.
I was testing again yesterday, on Fedora mainly.
lan-mouse is a bit clunky. It requires too many clicks to start on Gnome. bi-directional. Couldn’t get it to work on NixOS but I’m new to it.
Input leap can be finicky to install and set up too, depending on your system. For some reason on my setup it lags a lot, and from time to time I have to reconnect. They don’t give an easy access to builds, but you can find them. It requires to be connected with a GitHub account though.
I wish one of those search based launchers would implement a t9 keyboard for searching apps so I could replace Appdialer (which isn’t open source)
Crash on degoogled phones (dev is already aware)
Thank you for this detailed answer. It’s very interesting, and indeed a service worker sounds like a good answer to my bad connection
A community shared list of preferences for each website would be handy! but I don’t know if it’s feasible in terms of privacy
Never thought of that!
I rent a small VPS, so I could use that. Although my connection is really shitty I wouldn’t want it to load every time I open a new tab
I do that and it works really well, but you still need to use Mozilla’s servers for authentification. But it’s been a while so maybe there’s a way to host that too now.
A few years back NoScript was often recommended. I used it for a while but I’m not sure I did it right.
First time you go to a new website do you go through the process of allowing some scripts to make it usable?
if it’s the laid back linux guy, simply very enthusiastic, I’ll gladly sit next to him
some kind of fanboy, who thinks in terms of us vs them and who makes it his personality then nope
what about Posteo? when I compaired many providers a few years ago they seemed like one of the the most ethical
one caveat: you can’t use your own domain name, for privacy reasons. I wish they gave the option though. maybe it has changed since
no idea about calendar invites
They should sell black paper
Also Freetube, Newpipe
I bought a second hand Surface Pro 5 (2017), running Fedora gnome
I’ve started to write a review because I couldn’t really find one, and most of the comments are overly positive (as it often goes on Linux forums I’ve come to realize). It’s not done yet
But I can summarize it: as a tablet it’s not great but it mostly works. It’s certainly not for someone not ready to troubleshoot, and many problems have no, or no great solutions. Also gnome used with touch controls has a major bug (which, again, nobody ever mentions for some reason. It will be in my review)
As a 2 in 1 with little touch use it could be alright. The pen is quite good if you want to draw or write, even though there’s a small delay. The cover is okay, but you’d be better off with a quality laptop keyboard and big trackpad
I bought it mainly for reading, mostly European format comics (bandes dessinées). The resolution is great for that, and the size is good with a reader that removes white margins
Edit: to give you an idea I bought it for 190€ two months ago, with all accessories, good condition and good battery health (which does not mean battery life is good)
I loved Chaotic-AUR when I was using Arch. No waiting to build AUR packages, you know if it works right away.
You have to decide if you trust the source. Personally I’m not worried.
Also if you know how to fix an AUR package you can open a ticket on their github and they will update it immediately most of the time.
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And it works brillantly. No more missing pictures like with the fever api.
This app makes me use RSS again
The menus are definitely busy and confusing (there are many options), but once it’s set up I’ve never been bothered by the UI. I quite like how emails are shown OOTB in fact, with the right padding and day separation; I also use most buttons that are offered by default. So yeah, sane defaults.
Off the top of my head what I like:
Not trying to say it’s better, to each their own. But it’s great.
edit: I received an email at 06:19 in fairemail. it’s now 06:56 and I just received it in thunderbird