Good thing I use the Flatpak version of Sushi, I’ll just remove the network permission.
On some systems neofetch would actually run quite slow. Even on my fast system it would occasionally take a second because it hung on one step.
NixOS was troubleshoot central for me. Not all programs behaved as expected with Nix’s unique design.
I looked into this a bit more. It turns out that Metadata Cleaner was marked end of life by the owner because it’s no longer being maintained. This is different from the more common scenario where an app is using an end of life runtime. I guess Discover decides to remove apps that explicitly marked as end of life.
Still, it’s a poor UX to not give the user the choice. You may be able to work around the issue by pinning Metadata Cleaner, either using the CLI or Warehouse, an app to graphically manage flatpaks.
The authors found and reported vulnerabilities in Pagure and Open Build Service. These vulnerabilities have since been fixed.
You don’t need to do anything, these issues have already been fixed.
I did a bit more research into this and it seems this conspiracy is largely spearheaded by Kiwifarms, so I do feel bad by bringing it up.
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Safari has PWAs. They call it “Add to Dock”. Works well in my experience.
I haven’t noticed any major issues with Webkit on my Mac, only that Safari’s UI sucks.
Unfortunately Gnome Web also inherits most of Safari’s bad UI design. Really the only thing I want from Gnome Web (apart from performance improvements) is to have a bookmarks bars like Chromium and Firefox. Having to go into the bookmarks side bar is a major slowdown. I’ve had to work around it by using a keyboard shortcut for a new tab, typing in the bookmark name, then using arrow keys to navigate to it.
What are its benefits? It basically just feels like Safari, unfortunately including the things about Safari I don’t like.
Main thing I noticed is that it has the built in tracker (and I think ad?) blocking. I use AdGuard on Safari, but sometimes it doesn’t work correctly because AdGuard stopped running in the background.
Huh, he mains NixOS. Always a bit funny to see someone daily driving a distro different than what they professionally work on.
I thought I recognized that blog, I remember reading his blog TPM+FDE for NixOS back when I was trying NixOS.
There’s a theory that they’re the same person. I’m not sure how reputable it is, I follow them both, but haven’t seen any videos of them.
It certainly is a bit funny how Asahi Lina chose not to take a leadership position and she hasn’t steamed dev work in a month…
Clickbait. The VP Engineering for Ubuntu made a post that he was looking into using the Rust utils for Ubuntu and has been daily driving them and encouraged others to try
It’s by no means certain this will be done.
I thought this was going to be about that Mozilla exec speaking about Firefox as a legacy project where AI was their new focus.
Mozilla is independent. All the search deal really is is that Mozilla sets a default option to point to Google’s URL and not another. In exchange, Mozilla gets millions of dollars.
The reality is that the majority of users would choose Google even if it wasn’t the default. So Mozilla is both providing the most popular option as the default and benefitting from it.
Anyone who doesn’t trust Google, such as me and presumably you, have the freedom to change the default.
Overall, I don’t think Mozilla is wrong. Without the Google Search deal, Firefox will have less resources to build a competent browser.
But Mozilla has also done a poor job at becoming financially stable without this search deal. It also doesn’t help that Mozilla’s CEO’s salary keeps going up in spite of the declining market share.
It would have been nice is Mozilla was able to fill a niche like Proton: building a suite of secure and private services. But instead they’re moving towards advertising.
I’ve never needed to downgrade Firefox.
I just went on a journey looking at different local music players.
Just tried Rhythmbox. It’s not terrible, but not great either. It looks very bare bones.
Of the ones I’ve tried, I like Elisa the best. I spent a ton of time getting HQ artwork and quality metadata on my files and Elisa really shows that off. Rhythmbox barely shows any artwork. I just have two complaints about Elisa. First, Qt apps just don’t feel right in Gnome for various reasons: fonts are often too thick, icon contrast is bad, and Qt theme is weird for non-Breze. It also has weird scrolling behavior: it has forced scrolling smoothing and acceleration.
Runner up is Sayonara. It’s Qt based, but actually feels decent in Gnome. Overall I like the UI more than Elisa, but unfortunately it doesn’t handle showing my library as well. Artwork is duplicated (it shows albums multiple times if songs in them have different years) and some artwork is inexplicably missing.
It’s actually pretty nice in some situations.
One thing that bites me about Loupe / Image Viewer is that it always goes through images in alphabetical order, despite the sort option you have set in nautilus.
Sushi does go through items using the same sort option set in nautilus.
Though it can be finicky with videos, so I don’t use it for that.