

What do you mean?
What do you mean?
I love helix, I just wish the development was a bit faster. The main developers are all quite busy and I would love nothing more for them to be able to use some of the open collective money to pay themselves to work on it full time for a bit. I think in a year or two it will be amazing.
I really like Helix! When the plugin system comes it will be great, because it’s definitely missing some key features
Lots of pro-rapists in this thread. Fuck Russel Brand and fuck Google (obviously)
China bad updoots to the left
n=notify-send Done
Useful for long-running processes
Cars would still be needed in some situations though, in which case it would be better if they were small
Hyprland has a way to write custom shaders which would do what you want https://github.com/hyprwm/Hyprland/issues/1140#issuecomment-1546245134
They do exist but they are very expensive
Silence transphobe
If I needed a laptop I’d get a framework, sure it’s a bit more expensive at the beginning but you’ll probably save in the long run. It’s also good to show there’s a market for user serviceable tech, hopefully forces big tech’s hand a bit.
I do a lot, we also use the OpenStreetMap data for my work. I enjoy it but it’s definitely lacking in some areas, and there’s no app that really comes close to being a Google Maps replacement sadly.
I’d like to be able to use the same account for Lemmy / PixelFed / Mastodon with the native UIs for each. Something that will hopefully be possible in the future!
Then the fediverse will fade into obscurity. I know it’s hard to accept but walling yourself off from everybody else is not the right way to go.
I agree, they need to be kept in check. It’s sad the fediverse isn’t big enough to force them to behave. Ultimately though, if federated services continue to be hard to understand for the average user, people will slowly leave so that they can interact with normal people.
If you want the fediverse to work, you have to accept that large companies will want to be part of it.
The fact that people who have paid get to have their replies appear first means that you see the people with the worst opinions (people who are fine with giving Musk money) most of the time, just makes it a very un-fun experience.
Yes for Lemmy and Mastodon. YouTube has too much good content to skip, I feel like sites that can only rely on advertising to be profitable such as video hosting and search are going to be the hardest things to make fair.