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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)DX
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2 yr. ago

  • I did use the previous one. Liked it well enough, despite having some config issues. (definitely my own fault though)
    \ But then it entered maintenance mode, and I had a few alternatives to try out ... It's good to see it lives on though, so I'll keep an eye on it as I might give it another go, thanks :)

  • Thanks for sharing, looks really cool! Especially with how prevalent markdown is.

    Hopefully this isn't too off topic/thread derailing:
    \ As a longtime LaTeX enjoyer, lately I've become increasingly infatuated by Typst. With Excalidraw quickly winning my favour as well ...
    \ However I find myself daydreaming of some of Obsidian's powerfull features for knowledge graphing/"second brain"-ing, but given various reasons, never successfully convinced myself to use it. (Primarily: markdown seemingly a bit too simplistic for my preference, and Obsidian, to my knowledge, not being open source(?))
    \ Instead I've tried some alternatives, each with excellent ideas, unfortunately none really hitting home with my wierd brain. e.g. Zim, LogSeq, SiYuan, ...

    As such I'm curious to hear about others' setup, and thoughts. - Is Some(Quarkdown + Obsidian) perhaps what I've truly been longing for for?

  • I feel like hyprland is really popular, or at least it's the one I most often hear mentioned. It should be really configurable as well, so maybe it's worth a look. I'm not sure you're going to notice much of a performance difference though, unless the device has a really limited amount of RAM.

  • I think the people behind Session cares for their mission, and it might align with OP's, so maybe. Although I personally am not too fond of about all their choices.

    The omission of Forward Secrecy for instance doesn't sit well with me. Each to their own though, and they do go into their reasoning on their blog: https://getsession.org/session-protocol-explained

    Likewise their last audit from 2021, lists quite a handful of critical/moderate issues in their apps, hopefully they've fixet it. Afterall it's been a while since 2021. https://getsession.org/faq#security-audit

  • I'm excited you're giving Linux a try! There are a ton of excellent ressources online for learning about Linux, how to make it your own (a practice commonly called 'ricing'), or fix errors you may encounter. These are explored further in the links below :)

    1. Picking a distro. What I hear is that, unless you have some problematic hardware it doesn't really matter what you pick. So if it feels overwhelming, don't stress too much over if it's the "right one", you can always try different ones out. Having said that, my impression is, many coming from Windows seem to be happy with 'Mint'. Likewise 'Bazzite' seems popular as of late. But 'Pop_Os!', 'Debian' or 'Fedora', are also all perfectly valid choices. Personally I've liked using Endeavour OS with KDE, for quite a while.
    2. Software. There's so much cool software out there, so maybe search around for which can solve your needs. I like browsing Flathub.org or blogs, such as, Phoronix to discover new software. There might also be a discovery feature in the distro itself. Both Firefox (and its derivatives such as LibreWolf) and Chromium (along with its derivatives: Chrome, Brave, etc.) runs well. Even the much smaller project: LadyBird, does so. I have no experience with music production software on Linux, so cannot comment on that.
    3. Games. Might depend on which types of games you play. But to me it seems Steam (using Proton/Wine), Heroic Games Launcher, and Lutris, works great. The steamdb as others mention is also a super ressource!

    If you made it this far through my wall of text, I'm delighted by your curiousity. Two Linux "introductory videos" I'd like to share are respectively from Nick@thelinuxEXP Linux isn't (just) better, it's also more FUN! and Brodie Robertson's Linux Resources Every New Linux User Needs Odysee YouTube

  • Like everyone else is mentioning, Organic Maps is probably an excellent option.

    Personally, I also rather like Magic Earth, although it's sadly not FOSS. But it does have crowd sourced traffic info, and imo a better search ux.

  • Been using it for a while, and am pretty happy with it. It has some nice features, and works pretty well for me, so I'd recommend giving it a try. I believe it, unfortunately, doesn't support OVPN though. But as I understand Wireguard are to be preferred over OVPN anyways.

  • I am not sure how well they stack up against the competition, as I haven't really used them, but maybe they can hit the sweet-spot:

    KDE has an office suite: Calligra. Windows and macOS support seems to be preliminary, what that means in terms of stability/performance, I don't know.

    As you also mention Figma working decently for you, you could take a look at Penpot.

    In regards to your latex situation, maybe klatexformula, could be something for you. It generates images from latex. I've been pretty happy with it, in tandem with word processors, before fully jumping to latex. It's pretty lightweight, their site does mention it needs a minimal version of latex though, which I don't recall installing when using it, but both texlive, and miktex seem fairly small.

    Edit: as others also mention OnlyOffice might also be an option for you.

  • Can share some of my favourites

    • KISS laucher
    • Floris Board (keyboard, which I love to use)
    • Bitwarden + Aegis (password manager + OTP)
    • Eternity (for browsing lemmy)
    • Mull (hardened firefox fork)
    • Organic maps (maps + directions)
    • Track & Graph (for tracking trends/habits)
    • WebApps (running sandboxed websites)

    Just begun exploring using:

    • Immich (selfhosted photos solution)
    • ReThink (local dns/firewall tracking blocker)

    Btw, I believe Obsidian isn't FOSS.

  • Haven't tried Session, though it seemed like a good service, until I found it lacks perfect forward secrecy, which IMO seems like a bad decision. I think Berty seems interesting too, but it seems like it might take a short while before it becomes a relevant option.