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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/)NC
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2 yr. ago

  • But the comment you're replying to is talking about day-to-day life. Not for most of us, but unfortunately some minorities are being targeted in some places, and the trend seems to be getting worse, not better, in the whole world.

  • I am sorry to hear that. I don't personally use Android Auto, so that's a situation I'm not familiar with. I am also sorry to see people downvoting your comment just because you report a bad experience, that doesn't help anyone.

    I would recommend opening an issue about it on the project page in GitHub. Another advantage of FOSS apps is that developers are usually easer to reach for feedback and support, although I must say I don't have experience with the AntennaPod developers.

  • Interesting... I love the simple and clean type of Organic Maps, but it's cool that there's an app for everyone out there.

    The Organic Maps team is working on an outdoor style, for hiking and similar situations. They had it in a beta version some time ago, but they decided to rework it, so it is not ready yet. You can check in a couple of months if you're interested in seeing how it looks like.

  • There might be some website that offers that functionality using OSM data.

    One thing that we need to understand is that OSM is data. Loads of it. The ways of displaying and searching for that data are up to each website and app that uses OSM data: first the data has to be added to OSM, then someone has to develop a tool to easily view it.

  • And a second point here: how much of the remaining 33,59% belongs to Chromium-based browsers? Those still contribute to Google's monopoly over the web, so the final numbers are even worse.

  • Thank you, it gets complicated as you dive deeper. Am I right when I think that Chromium, although Open Source, is mainly developed by Google and therefore follows Google's agenda?

  • Thank you, I used to know the rendering engines fairly well a few years ago, but I'm out of the loop now.

    What about WebView? It's the rendering engine used in Android, closely related to Blink I assume.

  • Because it's the only browser not based on Google's Chromium rendering engine (Webview, WebKit? whatever). Using any other browser supports Google's monopoly over how we browse the internet and what we are allowed to see. No, fuck Google.

    Edit: spelling

  • To be fair both are small repositories, yes, but I managed to find them both when looking for a way to install Signal via F-Droid. And no, I'm not running CalyxOS, but a different degoogled ROM :)

    I might be wrong, but TwinHelix's Signal-FOSS seems to still be active, the latest update I found on their F-Droid repository and their GitHub is from yesterday: https://github.com/tw-hx/Signal-Android/releases/tag/v6.32.5.0-FOSS

    But anyway, I just wanted to share these 2 sources since I saw the Signal / F-Droid discussion happening. It could be useful to someone. I don't know enough to judge what option is better.

  • It looks like it's time to ditch whatever podcast app you're using.

    Look for a FOSS alternative, I'd recommend AntennaPod (https://antennapod.org/), but there are other alternatives out there: not bloated, no ads, no tracking, just what you choose to subscribe to.

  • Yes, I feel like all these Big Tech companies changed the parent company name (Facebook -> Meta, Google -> Alphabet) to confuse end users when they read news about how they harvest our data don't respect our privacy: the news talk about a big company spying on users, users know a few app names and most don't link both together