I use RSSPreview for this. If a feed is available and you click its icon, it gives you a menu where you can select a feed to visit. RSSPreview basically changes how feeds are displayed inside Firefox.
Mensh123
- 0 Posts
- 12 Comments
Mensh123@lemmy.worldto
Firefox@lemmy.ml•Firefox tab groups just got an upgrade, thanks to your feedback | The Mozilla Blog
21·2 months agoTab groups have become one of Firefox’s most loved ways to stay organized — over 18 million people have used the feature since it launched earlier this year. Since then, we’ve been listening closely to feedback from the Mozilla Connect community to make this long-awaited feature even more helpful.
Mensh123@lemmy.worldto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•The "Nothing to hide" argument is (still) a logical fallacy
3·3 months agoSee this discussion post. Is this my oppinion? No, but it’s probably the reason why. Consider making your point where Wikipedia editors will actually read it.
Mensh123@lemmy.worldto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Trump could offer refugee status to Europeans who oppose migrationEnglish
6·3 months agoDeal 🤝
Mensh123@lemmy.worldto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•If it ask for your phone number its not private.
12·3 months agoSignal’s server is open-source. Of course, they could do something else in secret, but the openness of the client (here’s the client) is enough to verify that E2EE exists.
Your phone number alone just doesn’t give any real insight: you can derive that the person behind it prefers to communicate in private and that they’re probably alive, but that’s about it. Also, I don’t think Signal can get your name without a government to look it up. That does happen sometimes, it’s just that nothing importmant ever comes out of it.
Mensh123@lemmy.worldto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•If it ask for your phone number its not private.
42·4 months agoSignal is free and open-source. It cannot be denied that basically everything, including minor details like usernames, is end-to-end encrypted and kept secure. The Signal protocol has been proven to be secure by many independent experts and thus it is mathematically impossible for Signal to gain access to your sensitive information (except for your phone number, obviously).
A phone number alone just won’t do much.
It’s POSIX-compatible, so most things that work on Linux should work there too.
Yup. You’ll need to tkinker with Linux too if you want disk encryption. At the very least, set a BIOS password.
What exactly are you looking for? “Home Server” and “NAS” are both terms used to describe computers running server software and basically nothing else. Their purpose is to run webservers (the infrastructure behind lemmy.world), game servers (the thing you can connect to in Minecraft, for instance), E-Mail servers (like GMail - not the App on your phone, but what it connects to to get your E-Mails from) and so on. Essentially, they exist just so that other computers can talk to them.
Nearly every server is headless (no mouse and keyboard, no screen). To interface with it, you connect over the internet. You rarely see them run a graphical interface (to save resources) - people use the terminal to administrate them.
Do you want a PC (as in: personal computer) instead? PCs (including laptops and smartphones) run (mostly) graphical applications and end-user applications, such as web browsers, E-Mail clients, office programs, games, etc. In this case, try usual PC hardware. Most will work on Linux (it might be adequate to point out that there are PCs available built specifically to run Linux). General hardware compatibility is pretty good for standard peripherals such as keyboards, mouses, speakers, monitors and cameras (exception for all of them: MacBooks and newer NVIDIA graphics cards). In the Laptop world, many seem to enjoy ThinkPads. Pick a distro (https://distrowiz.pages.dev/, I use Fedora btw), pick a Desktop Environment if you’re allowed to choose (technically you can always install another DE, it might just become messy) (the big ones are all great, the Deck’s desktop mode uses KDE Plasma) and off you go. Tip: Test your distro in a VM.
As for the Terminal: You won’t need it unless you go with Arch. Most of the time. The terminal is just very fast and way more standardized than GUIs. Therefore, Tutorials will use it all of the time. In rare occasions, GUI tools are not available. Good news: Learning the terminal is not as hard as learning to code. Once you feel ready, do try to learn how to use it. It’s a good QOL improvement.
Mensh123@lemmy.worldto
Firefox@lemmy.ml•Automatically generated page summaries as an experimental feature of Firefox 139 nightly
11·9 months agoAlternatively, you could make your response more useful, removing the UI to aid the AI. After all, the user should be allowed to choose how they navigate the web.
Mensh123@lemmy.worldto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•The inconsistent naming for insert row/columns in the German MS OfficeEnglish
2·9 months agoBing Translate is jest the best.

Linux supports NTFS, but NTFS doesn’t support Linux’s permission system. This is fine as long as you don’t need Linux to recognize a file as executable while it’s on there.