Checkout Toshy. This has been a life saver for me.
Checkout Toshy. This has been a life saver for me.
Angel and Buffy.
For sure. It’s good to know. But not a huge compromise considering we are talking about still using a flavour of Android and play services.
Ah. They have a lot thats open. And I believe if you run Headscale (and android and/or Linux clients), you can be fully open source.
I’ve just switched from an iPhone 12 Pro to Pixel 9 and am on GrapheneOS now. Aside from Signal chat history, everything switched over quite easily. Sandboxed google play services is simply an amazing feature. Rerouting location requests let’s me feel a certain level of trust when I use Google Maps now. There are a tonne of little quality of life features too that I don’t remember if base Android had back when I used it before; e.g. setting the default language for a specific application.
For using Immich without exposing it to the public, check out Tailscale. It’s a private VPN (wireguard) service (it’s partially opensource and provides paid tiers, but the free tier is all you’ll need; there’s an open source server called Headscale, if you need full open source) you can use on your home network that is dead simple to configure. You literally just login on you computer and your phone.
Zen for desktop: https://zen-browser.app/
Ironfox for mobile: https://ironfoxoss.org/
Yeah. Apps make the experience of mobile that much better. Voyager is a very good web app. Its just missing the snappiness of a native app.
Raccoon for Lemmy is the closest I can find to what I want.
Curious if anyone has any other suggestions for native and open source in Android.
I’ve tried it! Both on iOS and Android. Maybe it’s cause it’s not native. There’s something about how it feels that isn’t the same as a native app.
For iOS, I use Mlem. It’s open source and updated regularly (the TestFlight version at least). It’s got a really nice interface. Lots of little customization options. Feels a lot like Apollo. My second choice is Arctic. A lot of great options, has push notifications. But isn’t open source (yet!) and feels like it’s slightly less polished than Mlem.
I’m looking for Android equivalent to these two apps, but I’m not see anything remotely close.
mlem is pretty great. arctic too. I’m planning on switching back to Android this year though, anyone know any equivalent quality Android clients?
I imagine the code is not the problem, but more of a philosophical one. I am on your side that this is sorely needed in KDE. But I’ve been seeing KDE devs shoot down this type of functionality for a decade now and the state of this MR looks like more of the same.
Try clicking the URLs.
SSD: Server Side Decorations
CSD: Client Side Decorations
It’s how kwin fundamentally works. And why you can’t just have application specific buttons and widgets in kwin window decorations like how in Gnome you can.
The article I linked is from 2013. They’ve been discussing this for a long time.
KDE has always favoured SSD over CSD. So it kind of makes sense that LIM was rejected.
https://blog.martin-graesslin.com/blog/2013/02/client-side-window-decorations-and-wayland/
Aesthetically, I think CSD is the way to go. But functionally, I love KDE too much to use anything else.
Minor spoilers… but it was fun seeing how a contemporary to Kern uplifted a different species, and more deliberately. Which adds to the universe rather than just have it be… Kern is God kind of thing. And seeing a species that was more emotion based was pretty great too. Different types of intelligences… not to mention the completely alien Nodan species.
Children of Ruin was my favourite. The slight horror tones of some of the story really got me! And also… 🐙
Both great series. Revelation Space was my intro into hard sci-fi. What a freaking ride that story is.
Children of Time and its sequels are top notch, especially if you love animals and commentary on societal roles. It’s in my top Sci-Fi.
If you enjoyed Children of Time, definitely check out “A Memory Called Empire” by Arkady Martine. It’s a Sci-Fi political mystery with lots of fun word play. Aside from some really cool tech, the book really tackles what it means to be “Other” and how colonialism effects one’s idea of self. Some really cool ideas in this book. Easily my top Sci-Fi read this year.
Not sure about Debian, but on Arch Linux, hibernation with FDE works perfectly on my Framework laptop. It took a little to setup; I use a swapfile for my swap. And it exists on my encrypted drive. You know your use case best,I found for my usecase, a separate swap partition (to say nothing about two separate ones) was restrictive and unnecessary. A swapfile works well and lives on an encrypted drive. No need to tinker too much beyond that. Check out the Arch wiki, it might not align 100% with Debian but those wikis are super informative and can teach you how the process works so you can apply to Debian.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Dm-crypt/Swap_encryption#With_suspend-to-disk_support