Kitty, but most commands are probably happening in eshell. Feels more easily scriptable to me
Each totem on the pole is a symbolic representation of one family.
Kitty, but most commands are probably happening in eshell. Feels more easily scriptable to me
I use Fedora Silverblue personally (feels rock-solid and borderline impossible to mess up), but you might want to get more familiar with the basics before getting into immutable distros. I’d echo what everyone else is saying and do Linux Mint first
Also insanely unhealthy to consume stuff like this on a day-to-day basis
Just mpv for me. Simplest and most versatile option
The Pixel Tablet can run GrapheneOS, which is the best stock Android alternative IMO
Great project, just donated
The US has a pretty severe urban / rural divide in most of its states, but I don’t think it’s enough. You’d usually need a pretty clean split along territorial lines for that.
Minus the sandboxing and security improvements, apparently
What’s the advantage vs. the current version?
Also looks like it’s removing an important visual affordance (i.e., which areas you can click to drag the window), unless I’m misinterpreting it
Just a heads up, here in the states I haven’t been able to use a OP6 as an actual phone- without VoLTE working on t-mobile yet, all incoming calls go straight to voicemail:
https://gitlab.com/postmarketOS/pmaports/-/issues/1878
Might want to look into what the situation is with your carrier, or if there’s a workaround for you. Think as soon as this is fixed, it could actually work as a daily phone for me (aside from the missing camera)
Basic functions like web browsing are borderline unusable on the OG pinephone, unfortunately. Still a fun device to hack away at, but I wouldn’t use it as a phone
No. Actors are participating in storytelling, and ‘evil’ characters are just an exercise in symbolism and mythmaking.
Usually it’s just one program per virtual desktop, and maybe a second (briefly) for one-off terminal commands, etc.
The whole point for me is to avoid wasting time moving a mouse around or manually manipulating anything.
Is that an argument in favor of glued-in batteries, though? A lot of users’ phones aren’t going to make it for six years if it’s non-trivial (or impossible) to swap out the battery for a new one.
I’d only set one up if it were fully open-source and self-hosted. It looks like there are a couple of options out there that meet those criteria (like Mycroft), but I haven’t looked into it enough yet.
Started having the same issue during covid lockdowns. What works for me now is:
I keep a .dotfiles folder in my home dir, use syncthing to back up those files on a couple of other computers, and then (on a new install) just make the actual config files symlinks to those files.
The project you’re thinking of is probably PostmarketOS, though it doesn’t look like anyone’s started work on an iPad 2 or mini yet.
They’re on Lemmy now, so that might be a good place to follow up (or if you’re curious to start hacking away at anything yourself)
I never really ‘got’ Twitter-style microblogging, and still don’t really get Mastodon for the same reason. But I could some use for it if I represented some kind of group or organization that needed to publish regular updates.
Not being able to run Signal on my Android tablet feels really inconvenient. That would be no. 1 on my wish list