Yeah, if I can't use dash-to-panel, I'm not using GNOME lmao. It feels like such a basic feature and a complete oversight that it isn't part of GNOME on its own.
Pretty much. The reason Google's search results were so good was because of the information they had on you and on other users who made similar searches. I'm not advocating for DDG to start tracking users, though. But it'll be hard for them to have a "Google-like" search experience (single search bar with no other parameters) without that kind of data.
Does Netflix have a reputation for being inconsistent? I know people are pissed with the recent password sharing policy, but as a dev, I've only ever heard interesting/downright awesome stuff coming from Netflix's tech side.
Curious to see if they've got anything interesting for the iPhone 15 (USB-C aside). I remember a bunch of tech YouTubers and journalists hyping up the iPhone 14 as the iPhone that would make you want to switch if you hadn't already, and I just couldn't fathom why any of those features would ever be the thing that made you want an iPhone if you didn't already have one.
Default Firefox settings with uBlock Origin results in everything passing except the unique fingerprint, and hardening Firefox to do that is easy enough with something like Privacy Badger, some fingerprint anonymization extensions or just disabling JavaScript. From my experience, though, doing that will make the web nigh-unusable for the average user with sites regularly breaking or constantly spamming you with Captchas wherever you go.
I'm curious how "usable" Mullvade Browser is for the everyday user, compared to Firefox with uBlock Origin.
Jesse Cox on YouTube has been doing a "5 Minute Gaming News" show, where he basically goes over the daily gaming news. From there, it's usually easy enough to find articles about it. He also covers new releases on mondays, with trailer highlights and stuff. It's pretty neat.
Especially since it was revealed Reddit employees had access to /r/places without a timer. They'd just fill it with random shit if it was dead (which it won't be, because streamers will get people to flock there regardless).
You can set its behavior (in the settings) to not replace anything by default. Then, you can add the channels you want to replace in a specific filter.
So if you wanted to see something from, say, Linus Tech Tips, but really don't like their thumbnails and titles, you could add them to the filter without affecting the rest of YouTube.
The TL;DR; is that it allowed Gitea to better work with companies that wanted to fund them but couldn't fund individuals directly, moved the Gitea trademark to an entity that could outlive the creator, etc.
There hasn't been any significant changes to how Gitea operates or can be used from a user point-of-view since the change happened.
Forgejo is a fork of Gitea that will pull changes made from Gitea, without being a company. In the events that Gitea goes to shit, it'll be there as a replacement.
You'll take your $200+ gaming mouse that has a 90% chance to have a double click issue because we can save $0.02 per mouse by using cheaper switches, that'll force you to get multiple replacements through warranty (if it hasn't expired yet), and you'll like it!
Logitech
Meanwhile, my OG G502 mouse from 2013~ is still working perfectly almost 10 years later.
Another big problem was that people kept comparing it to Overwatch. Other than the cartoon style and both of them being shooters, Battleborn wasn't anything like Overwatch. It was closer to moba shooters like Monday Night Combat. It's a shame it shut down. I quite liked it.
Year of the enshitification, more like.
It feels like every company just decided 2023 was the year they finally pulled the trigger and tried to cash-out and bail.