

The image is very high persfonmance
The image is very high persfonmance
You just updated her
Nix intensifies
I think you can with Pins, no right-click menu, but you can find them easily from within the app
Very much so, not quite ready for prime time maybe, but you can play with it, StarFive is quite well-known for their chips in this space for example
If the optimistdaily says no Imma be real sad
Honestly if you don’t want to think too much about it, go with Briar, it’s way more battle tested, while Berty seems like it hasn’t seen much adoption since it’s younger, both have a bit of development activity I saw, so I can’t say if one is more or less maintained than the other
As for the actual question of gauging which has the better cryptographical implementation, I don’t know either, beside the most surface level information I know very little.
I believe if you want to look into it, you’ll have to start from their whitepapers
Because they’re small, smaller than short people
Yet another Majaro L? Not one to dunk on random distros, but I’ll always make an exception for Manjaro
I had no idea, damn I never thought I’d see such a timeless project fall like this.
For the unaware (like me) here’s an article summing up Matt Mullenweg’s situation https://digitalcxo.com/article/matt-mullenweg-automattics-ceo-seems-bound-and-determined-to-wreck-wordpress/
Same experience here, at least that was the case for me a couple years ago
(Btw, OMG another omega, hello brotha)
Oh yeah, I see what you mean better, I think there is a good trend nowadays though, for example what do you say is missing from openSUSE to make it tick all boxes for you?
That’s really good!
Some daily Google hate here is healthy and welcome XD
I don’t feel like that’s much of an issue, new people are usually introduced to the easier and more robust options. There’s nothing wrong in how other distros operate, just that the community shouldn’t feel compelled to suggest them to people they can presume aren’t the target audience
Oh, can’t really try that since it requires root, but that’s really cool!
Besides the files that are easy enough to move over, for app data there really is no other choice than to either haves ones that support their own export/import functionality or if you’re not lucky enough to have eliminated the apps that don’t have it and need their data you can only go back to papa Google and ask to politely get all your stuff for restoration on the new phone.
Takeaways:
KDE Connect can get you most of the way there, unfortunately you won’t be able to auto sync the clipboard from the phone to the PC due to an Android limitation (the other way around works instead), but you can still manually send it over. For example, to make it easier to access, I added the tile for sending it in the quick settings
One day maybe I’ll understand why people are fine with package managers that have you sweat if you’re updating whenever the heck you want rather than often and with a second pair of eyes on the news
Edge really said “There can be only one!”