

The problem is not the tool. It’s the inability to use the tool without a third party provider.
The problem is not the tool. It’s the inability to use the tool without a third party provider.
you can remap keys with any keyboards
I use Ctrl, Alt for applications, Super for the os/windowing. I hated MacOS which mixed these things. Luckily X.org let’s you do whatever you like, sometimes it’s just harder to configure. But I like it as it is.
urxvt, bspwm, sxhkd, and many small utilities that I built my desktop with. It’s hard to reproduce the same setup.
You listed malwares. Nvidia works tho.
I mean… It’s already over-specified compared to others: “sex, gender or sexual orientation”. It’d be equally right to criticize religion for why don’t they write “belief, spiritualism, religion”, and to include identity, and expression.
They should just write “sex stuff”, and everyone is happy.
I’m not in favor of YouTube, but what exactly missing here?
I agree that flatpak is not there yet. The API is limited, and it is also hard to package an app. But I really want to see it succeed
I don’t use any of these, but I’m curious. Could you please write some examples?
I’ve never understood putting arbitrary limits on a company laptop. I had always been seeking for ways to hijack them. Once I ended up using a VM, without limit…
hey it’s free money for France
Oh they do. They love type-c.
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Oh right. Thanks, indeed. However, for private apps on LAN addresses it’s still a problem.
My only problem with PWAs is that they have arbitrary security requirements. Anything non-localhost needs https. No self-signed cert allowed. Enforcing people to buy a router that supports dyndns for their self hosted apps is odd. I’m wondering who makes these rules.
do they interfere?
The only problem is, my internet’s upload speed is slow as hell.
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It’s interesting that a closed-source app has good reputation among FOSS enthusiasts. Surely they are not a Microsoft or Apple, but still who controls your computer, you or them?
When the marketing went too far that it brought AI the wrong meaning.