I like them, almost all my applications are installed with flatpak.
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Maybe they read something about the titanium dioxide contained in some sunscreen products. There is some research indicating that its not as safe as we thought and that it might be carcinogenic.
e8d79@discuss.tchncs.deto Linux@programming.dev•postmarketOS v25.06: the one with systemd2·15 days agoI would really like to try this but the device support matrix looks a bit dire. Nothing newer than 2021 and spotty support for various hardware features across the board.
e8d79@discuss.tchncs.deto Linux@lemmy.ml•An update on the X11 GNOME Session Removal. The X11 session for GNOME 49 will be disabled by default and it’s scheduled for removal0·29 days agoThe source code is freely available and GNOME isn’t beholden to Canonicals decisions. If the Ubuntu devs want to keep X11 around nobody can stop them from maintaining it themselves, or pay somebody from the GNOME team to do it for them.
The Adobe stock photos link says its generated.
You can just buy them for one year and keep using the perpetual fallback license. Also, they can fuck right off with their planet incinerating automatic plagiarism chat bots.
Most of their IDEs you can use for free for non-commercial purposes and even if you need to buy them; when you compare software development to any other profession our tools are incredibly cheap. You can get all the Jetbrains IDEs for less than 300€. Compare that to a HDL simulator or a 3D CAD application like Autodesk. These easily cost several thousand euros each year.
e8d79@discuss.tchncs.deto PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Desperate to fight Steam, Epic burns money like firewood – but admits the Epic Games Store kind of sucks and "there's still a ton of work to be done" with "long overdue features"English0·1 month agoImagine how successful their store could have been if they had put all that money into improving the launcher and not antagonizing large parts of their customer base instead.
e8d79@discuss.tchncs.deto Programming@programming.dev•An Elaborate GitHub Comment on Microsoft's new `edit` CLI Text Editor Asking for Simplicity and Predictability0·1 month agoSomeone already tried to add AI support to it. They only failed due to their own incompetence.
e8d79@discuss.tchncs.deto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Low quality cropping will officially launch on Lemmy in 2025 after passing budget evaluation3·1 month agoI am reminded of The Jaunt where animals and humans can survive teleportation only while unconscious.
Yes, I did. They are both perfectly fine editors but they don’t hold a candle to a proper IDE with a good Vim plugin. I also want to play some games that go beyond the production values of SuperTuxKart and Battle for Wesnoth.
I am eagerly awaiting your FOSS implementation of all Jetbrains IDEs; and no the half-baked solutions that are Visual Studio Code and the various other editors that need approximately 50 plugins to get basic refactoring features don’t cut it. While you are at it, please also reimplement the whole Steam catalog.
Reading that Flatpak is struggling to merge new features is concerning. Flatpak is a really important project for getting commercial developers on board. I don’t want to go back to unpacking .deb files built only for Ubuntu 12.04 to install an application and I want closed source apps to be sandboxed.
e8d79@discuss.tchncs.deto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Why does Signal want a phone number to register if it's supposedly privacy first?0·2 months agoSession is a Signal fork and they removed forward secrecy which makes them vulnerable to Key Compromise Impersonation attacks.
I really like it as well. I did three major version upgrades so far and they have been flawless. I also really like Flatpak, finally a way of easily installing something on Linux without breaking half of the system because the application you wanted to install uses libfoo 2.0 and not libfoo 1.9.9-patch-1337. With my atomic desktop applications that worked yesterday also work today. Things don’t randomly break all the time.
The future of Fedora Atomic also looks exciting; Timothée Ravier is working on sysexts which are a way of installing applications without ostree layering. I could remove most of my ostree layered packages with that.
There is this steadily growing activist group that you could join up with.
e8d79@discuss.tchncs.deto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Self Hosted OpenSource Projectmanagement ToolEnglish10·2 months agoWe use OpenProject at my job and its pretty good. You can use Nextcloud as a document repository and integrate it with OpenProject.
Coq cowardly renamed their project because of this.
I would rather go with a completely new approach like the one of
run0
.