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3 yr. ago

  • I don't know if it does everything you need, but pinning a tab prevents it from unloading AFAIK.

    • Firefox (often preinstalled)
    • Thunderbird
    • Code
    • FreeTube & Stremio
    • Apostrophe
    • KeePass
    • Nextcloud
    • Syncthing
    • yt-dlp
  • The search is abmyssal in my opinion. I can't reliably paste links I've found elsewhere — always have to manually change it to match the expected community syntax. I only every use it if I have to, and then I resort to search for the community of interest, and use the community view to find a post I'm looking for. Not suited for discovery in my experience.

    It may have improved lately though, I wouldn't know since I'm not using it much.

  • That's a long list of changes, wow.

    Personally, I'm not considering Vanilla OS just yet. It does too many things in a custom way. I am however keeping an eye on the project, since they have interesting ideas and they're making progress in the area of immutable distributions (which will be the future I figure).

  • Same for Florisboard: press ?123, then 1234.

    Side note: Florisboard also allows you to use custom keyboard layouts, which would make it possible to

    a) make the numbers keypad accessible with one click from the main layer and b) move the numbers actually to the right side (not in the middle like they're now).

    There's a catch though: currently, the process is quite technical. An easier way is planned, but it's hard to say when it will arrive.

  • I second the recommendation to use NTFS. I don't have the same use cases as OP, but in my experience it works really well. Back in the days when I was using Windows, I had a system and a data partition (i.e. personal files, pictures, videos... you get it). When I switched to Linux, I kept my data partition and just mounted it on my Linux system. I started with dual boot and didn't have any issues. No need to manually install a NTFS driver these days.

    That's a couple of years ago and my secondary SSD's still that same old NTFS partition. Thought about moving to a Linux native filesystem, since I don't use Windows anymore, but never had an actual reason to do it.

  • Oh, yeah you should. I mean I'd advice against it, but since you already know the pain of switching layouts… sure, go ahead! :D

    I prefer Bone over Neo, Neo has quite broad software support though. I'm using Bone on Linux and macOS without any issues.

  • oh, Good luck with that. Make sure however to respect the users privacy and indexing preferences. People in the Fediverse are very privacy consious and not everyone likes their post scraped and indexed.

    I'd start with the Mastodon docs, it's a solid resource to get started.

  • I use a variant of the Neo-Layout called Bone. It's an ergonomic layout optimized for German and English text. The base layer is already different (see the linked page), but I also really like it for programming, since there's an entire layer with easily accessible symbols:

  • While this chart certainly shows how dominant mastodon.social in the Fediverse is, I like this chart. It also shows how diverse the Fediverse is. For any other social network this graph would be a simple circle. For the Fediverse it shows 38 different servers, and apart from mastodon.social, the distribution seems quite fair.

    Very good!

  • Biggest follower count.

  • I can't speak for the BOOX Tab Ultra C directly, but I'm interested in opinions on it, because I'm thinking about buying one as well.

    I have the BOOX Note Air though. Overall, I really like it. I use it to read books and learning material, do math exercises and occasionally to draw. I love that it's smart (full Android, download any app) and dumb (slow, grayscale, don't get distracted easily) at the same time.

    Technically you can use it for browsing the web, however I wouldn't recommend it. It' too slow if you want to hop between different sites. It's only comfortable if you access a specific site to read on for a while. I hope the BOOX Tab Ultra C is faster (I mean it should), but if the web is one of your main use cases, I'd rather go for a proper tablet. Even if the ePaper screen is relatively fast, it's still too slow to be fun. Since you're already experienced using ePaper screen, I'm confident you can judge that for yourself though.

    My motivation to get an upgrade is mainly the Note Air quickly slows down when drawing anything semi-complex or above. I can recommend it for reading, taking notes and (limited) drawing. For anything else, I recommend a tablet instead.

  • Time to ungoogle my phone once again. Did it before, reverted it in a stupid move to try out Monster Hunter "Go"; should've never done it in the first place. Bye, bye, Google. Go fuck yourself.

  • It's not like they'd develop a new engine for iOS. They already have one which can now be used for iOS as well -- but not everywhere.

  • It's not in the linked article, but it was part of it in the beta release notes. Now it's on the dedicated Android release notes page (https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/android/122.0/releasenotes/):

    • Firefox for Android can now be set as the default PDF reader.
    • Firefox for Android now supports enabling Global Privacy Control. With this feature, Firefox informs websites that the user doesn’t want their data to be shared or sold. This feature is enabled by default in private browsing mode and can be enabled in normal browsing in Settings → Enhanced Tracking Protection -> Tell websites not to share & sell data toggle.
    • To reduce user fingerprinting information and the risk of some website compatibility issues, the OS version is now always reported as "Android 10" in Firefox for Android's User-Agent string.
  • Maybe a bit patience will do, since Thunderbird is planning to...

    a) make an iOS app b) add support for sync to you can sync your settings and account conifgurations between devices

    I don't know of any good solution that works right now however. :-/

  • Side note: in recent versions of Firefox you can use right clickCopy Link Without Site Tracking to get a clean version of the link without any tracking paramters.

  • I second the recommendation for Tree Style Tabs, however Sideberry did work better for me (don't recall why, sorry).

    One downside is that they don't hide the horizontal tab bar on the top. AFAIK you can manually hide it by editing the userstyle css file.

    https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/sidebery/

  • Yeah, agreed, Marginalia's more suited to discover small-web type of content.

    Another thing that'd be better as a daily driver, but requires manual curation, is to filter out specific domains in your searches. Brave supports that with the Goggles feature, Mojeek calls it Focus. AFAIK Kagi too has a similar feature.

    I don't know any search engine that's able to fully exculde paywalled content though.

  • Personally, I'm not interested in the type of posts you mention. However, I don't mind it. In general I think it's great to tell the world if you ditch Windows for Linux, because it shows other (Windows) users that they can do it, too.

    Though I have to agree that for a dedicated Linux community, it doesn't add too much value. If I think a post is a bad fit for the community, I vote it down.