Also, Plex email blasted a few weeks ago about how nobody can share their libraries anymore without paying for a subscription. That was the push I needed to check out Jellyfin again, and the experience ranges from "good enough" to "that's better than Plex" for me and my buddies.
Too bad there is so much focus on AI though. The UI looks nice, and templating and being able to schedule posts would be super handy, but I don't need an AI to write things for me. I find that using AI is ethically icky anyhow; I'd rather not have it in any of the tools I use.
Is it possible to disable all the AI features when using Postiz? Like, a boolean setting in the deployment configs would be great.
Dunno if it would meet your needs, but I've been using Input Remapper for binding macros to various key presses and mouse buttons under Wayland. It does prompt for root access, but it's a GUI. It supports any input method, as far as I can tell. It even supports my tablet.
I use it to bind stuff like hold(key(BTN_LEFT).wait(100)) to some button to repeatedly left click while I'm holding that button down.
What you're saying here may be a valid concern, I don't know. I gotta say though, the way you're presenting it discourages people from taking you seriously.
The dramatic language, exclamation points everywhere, the OVERUSE of ALL CAPS for EMPHASIS and so on makes this feel like some Qanon nonsense from Aunt Karen, and the eyes glaze over very quickly while trying to decipher it.
Just a friendly note for future posts, you can take it or leave it.
Your original post doesn't say Fahrenheit anywhere though. I mean, I'm a USian so I knew what you meant by "freedom degrees" but I don't think it's fair to act like everyone in the world who might see this post would know that phrase means Fahrenheit.
Single digit temperatures. One can always wear more clothing to keep warm, but can only get so naked in triple digit heat before dying from exhaustion or dehydration.
Yeah, Readarr is very awkward to use, but still sad to see going away. If the main problem is just a usable metadata server, maybe someone can save the project without much trouble.
Lidarr is similarly strange with it's focus on artists and albums only, and apparently refusing to implement song search.
I feel like the developers of these two projects don't actually use their own software to encounter the huge pain points, but maybe they have a use case that I don't understand.
I have been dating non monogamously for something like 15 years now. It's not without it's unique challenges, but most of the problems people have with polyamory are actually problems they have with monogamy as well, it's just easier to avoid dealing with certain things (like relationship insecurity) when monogamy allows people to pretend they aren't happening or to lionize expressing them negatively (as jealousy, for example).
In my opinion, even if you decide it's not for you, exploring non monogamy is very likely going to give you better tools and healthier perspectives than you'd have if you remained "safely" monogamous your entire life.
Yeah the wording in the picture makes it sound like cats aren't supposed to be behind the door, because they can't get out. The implication being that I should open the door to let them out.
OBS could do that, I suppose. Add a screen capture source, and place a color source behind it sized 10px larger than the screen capture rect. Hit record.
I think they might be referring to icons next to menu items in the right click menu.
I think those icons can be handy sometimes, but I find them to be massively overused in KDE especially, to the point that it feels visually overwhelming sometimes. Having zero icons at all in GNOME might be the other extreme, but I appreciate how clean it looks.
Blender using icons strategically to visually group related items is probably the best of both worlds.
Are there rust haters? I guess there must be, but I don't think I've run across that so much as the "everything ever made must be rewritten in rust" crowd, and then everyone else who doesn't much care what language is used as long as it works.
Well this is bound to be controversial, to say the least. GNOME and systemd are two pieces of software that attract very polarized opinions.
I'm interested to see how this evolves. The planned session restore feature sounds nice. With the Wayland changes coming too, GNOME 50 should be a big deal, one way or another.
What do you mean by that? Aren't those opposites? That is, if something is unique then it's being inconsistent.