How does the flathub version perform? I noticed v2 can be run in the browser, and thought to give it a whirl in edge (under Linux, since it supports sync now).
The only practical thing they provide for me is slightly better readability, and eye candy (my prompt rely on them). I like my shells functional and pretty 😁
I was considering Foot, it is fast (renderwise and in interactive use) and the dev seems like an awesome person. But it doesn't support ligatures. I'll watch the issue and give it a shot when it's implemented.
The car garages. I never drove a car in Japan, but it looked like there was a system and some kind of futuristic hydraulic automation thingy to put your car in an available slot??
But in general, I got a lot of retrofuturism vibes in Japan.
Also, while not technology, it is worth mentioning that people there are incredibly polite and friendly - even in Tokyo rush hour.
I also used it to interact and store data through my python apps, to avoid dealing with it directly in python.
You can also use it as a Kanban board
Also, I've been trying to use it as an excel replacement - which is an overengineered solution but you get impeccable dataquality.
Nocodb is a bit wonky, but it is quite easy to work with (front- and backend) and since everything is in the database format you choose - you're in control of how you want your data.
I didn't really see the benefit of this besides having a snapshot or backup of my home folder for my use case (I don't have that many config/text files that needs tracking), but I can recommend chezmoi for those interested.
I have a huge datablob that I mirror off-site once monthly. I have a few services that provides things for my family, I take a backup of them nightly (and run a "backup-restoration" scenario every six months). For my desktop, none at all - but I have my most critical data synched / documented so they can be restored to a functional state.
I second obsidian. I was on the verge to jump onto logseq, but found its way of handling notes to be... different. I also felt a dislike of anytype where I don't really have control over my notes. Obsidian clicked with me from the start and felt right. So I went with it, even though it's not FOSS (which is usually a hard requirement from me).
But this is by design, snap containers aren't allowed to read data outside of their confinements. Same goes for flatpak and OCI-containers.
I don't use snap myself, but it does have its uses. Bashing it just because it's popular to hate on snap won't yield a healthy discussion on how it could be improved.
Just make sure about what you're getting yourself into: features such as IR facial detection and stylus input isn't supported on all models OOTB by the surface kernel. Also, it is a bit messy with how surface handles booting.
Linux on surface works (I got Ubuntu on both my Go gen 1 and pro 7) but expect to put in time to tinker and manage unexpected issues.
OMG! I didn't even know about this, thanks! Will look into it, would be awesome to have ps command spit out things like I want them by default :-)