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Not sure how you get from Fediverse people researching what server admin/moderation structures work well and which ones don’t to CIA censorship.
Techie, software developer, hobbyist photographer, sci-fi/fantasy & comics fan in the Los Angeles area. He/him.
Main: @kelson@notes.kvibber.com
Website: KVibber.com #IndieWeb
Moved from KelsonV@lemmy.ml
Not sure how you get from Fediverse people researching what server admin/moderation structures work well and which ones don’t to CIA censorship.
“What would incentivise companies to use it over a regular website with tracking and whatnot?”
Nothing…and that’s kinda the point.
Oh geez, thinking back to the “we had it first!” wars between Opera fans and Firefox fans about tabs back in the pre-Chrome days…
Firefox, and Vivaldi for the occasional site that doesn’t work on Gecko. (They’re built on the Chromium engine, but absolutely refusing to implement this crap)
Looks like it is available for free, but you get a really awkward username. I just enabled it on an old WP.com blog that I have on a free account and while @kelson.wordpress.com@kelson.wordpress.com works (I was able to subscribe to it from both Mastodon and GoToSocial), it’s a bit unwieldy.
Apparently not anymore. I have a free account on WordPress.com and I just turned it on like you said.
Same here. I have a few applications that I had to specifically turn on Wayland support for (Thunderbird & Vivaldi, for instance), and a lot that work just fine, and the ones I have issues with are mostly the X-only apps running on Xwayland, which tend to be less stable than they were directly under X, but there are only a few that I still use.
The rest of the page? Probably. I stopped reading after the comic.
I have a single Raspberry Pi 3b as a local file/media server running Jellyfin. I’m also running BOINC and seeding torrents of various Linux distributions. External HDD for storage, plus a thumb drive for the local media and another for the torrents so it only has to spin up when someone’s actually using it.
It’s not super-fast by any means, but it’s fast enough to listen to music over my LAN, which is the main thing I need it to do quickly. Though eventually I plan on setting up a better NAS on something with faster I/O.
If I was only using it for file sync, maybe. Though as it happens, the Linux desktop file sync client works fine on here, and I can work on files locally.
But that doesn’t help for things like, say, account settings, or tasks, or getting the right caldav URL to be able to plug it into a local client.
I’m using it for multiple services, not just one, and while some have apps available, not all do, and some features aren’t supported in the corresponding app.
I’m using Nextcloud for a lot more than just file sharing. Calendar, contacts, tasks, RSS reader sync, etc.
Same. Thunderbird now has native support for CalDAV and I use DAVx5 to sync it with my Android devices.
They don’t really use the major.minor.bugfix scheme anymore. If they did, they wouldn’t be at version 117.
I tend to think of them all as minor updates that add up over time, like a rolling release with numbers.
Assuming you mean the save-to-read-later functionality, I hear good things about Wallabag. You can even self-host it if you want.
A backpack solves both problems!
KDE Plasma handles the touch screen fine on my PineTab2.
It works in LxQt too, but only in portrait mode (which is the default for this device). I keep meaning to look up how to tell it to rotate the touch coordinates along with the display, and I keep not getting around to it.
But the main issue I’ve run into is that most GUI apps for Linux are…let’s just say they’re not designed with touch input in mind.
I’ve been using the Firefox Translations extension that this is probably building on. Also runs entirely in the client.
Having this built into the browser is going to be a great selling point.
I’ve been using it for a while now. Currently on the “main” instance, cross-posting reviews to my website.
Same here. The learning curve is higher on Vespucci, but once you’re familiar with it it’s extremely capable!