I love Vivaldi. Am sad it’s Chromium. Wish Firefox would take a page out of Vivaldi’s features book and innovation approach.
I love Vivaldi. Am sad it’s Chromium. Wish Firefox would take a page out of Vivaldi’s features book and innovation approach.
Mastodon struggles a bit to pick up pace.
Found this:
https://www.makeuseof.com/why-people-leaving-mastodon/
It explains some pain points.
Agreed. Horrible news.
Hoping Syncthing-Fork will continue.
I just installed that on your recommendation.
Hoping for the best.
Here the link for anyone who wants to check it out.
This!
Interesting. Gotta try that.
I have P2Play installed. It only supports 1 instance at a time. 🤷
Are there any clients that support multiple instances? It would improve my feed if I would see content from several instances at once.
Ok. I’ll follow it. Dazzle me. 🙂
Cool project.
The only question worth asking: does it beat Obsidian in some ways?
How many times has this been posted now? Genuine question: why is this such a big deal?
In fact, we might be able live there.
“Lunar cave systems have been proposed as great places to site future crewed bases, as the thick cave ceiling of rock is ideal to protect people and infrastructure from the wildly varying day-night lunar surface temperature variations and to block high energy radiation which bathes the lunar surface,” said Katherine Joy, professor in earth sciences at the University of Manchester. “However, we currently know very little about the underground structures below these pit entrances.”
Am with you. Their midrange phones still have headphone jacks, though. I like that.
True.
And while we wait we keep our factories running, our cars on the street, our planes in the air, our meat on the tables, our plastic wrapped around everything and keep believing that we will be just fine.
I would say it is openSUSE Aeon.
An immutable distro that you install and it “just works”. Applications come in via the onboard Software Manager (using Flatpack). It is almost impossible to break, as the system itself is read-only. If an update should break something, the OS rolls back itself. It can do this, because it’s basically updating what you’ll get after the next reboot, not the running system. If something goes wrong, it reboots to the working version.
Still in development, but super stable.
Edit: spelling
Not mentioned in the article, but I wish there were a (simple) way to get Microsoft Store apps to run on Linux. Some do by jumping through technical hoops, but many don’t.
I really wish this would gain some traction. As it is, there is just not enough content there to compete with YouTube in any reasonable way.
Bookmarked, you superstar! 🌟
You either spend your life really well or you have way too much time on your hands.
Either way I read your post with happy curiosity. 🙂