I like the Prusa mini. Good entry level printer. Not cheap with ~500€. But it is also easy to repair and upgrade compared to the MK3/4. The Bowden system means slower print speed but also easy repair. I upgraded mine with the Bondtech Gears.
I don’t know if it fits on your list. Besides that it is small and one of the cheapest Prusa Printers, I see no benefit.
(I have it because it fits in my room with the enclosure, now the CoreOne would be technically better but much more expensive)
Using Mullvad Browser + Mullvad VPN could mitigate this a little bit. Because if you use it as intended (don’t modify Mullvad browser after installation) , all Mullvad users would have the same browser fingerprint and IPs from the same pool.
I hope it becomes usable. If they hold there promise. Linux Wayland apps could be run through emulation layer, FreeBSD apps would run native and many MacOS apps should work out of the box.
It’s pretty solid.
I use it daily and don’t have any big problems.
Install is simple. Just install adb and fastboot from your linux repository. This should cover the most of the installation requirements.
AFAIK the AppStore versions are often Sandboxed and have automatic update through the AppStore. I am not sure if they are better or more secure regarding the permissions API.
I personally switched to Ente.io for shared photo albums. Works great. Encrypted, cheap and you don’t have to make an account as a guest user. I highly recommend that you give it a try.
Also if you want to (opt-in). It got on device AI/ML for face and object recognition.
https://developers.revolt.chat/faq
As of right now, Revolt does not feature any federation and it is not in our feature roadmap.
However, this does not necessarily mean federation is off the table, possible avenues are:
Any federation that is implemented MUST exercise caution in: