The health related reasons others gave are interesting, but my reasoning is this pretty simple:
On normal weekdays I don't really have breakfast, so brushing my teeth as one if the first things makes sense. On weekends I like to have breakfast with my family so I'd like to get rid of morning breath before I talk to people.
I would love to see Apple go down the route of actually supporting modern OpenGL and Vulkan on their hardware. The hardware is amazing but forcing software to rely on Metal just holding it back especially when it comes to games.
Agreed. Especially for long text posts it's handy to collapse the post.
But more often than not it happens when I try to click a link and miss the hitbox ever so slightly. So maybe for posts a button to collapse would be the way to go?
But if you on instance.alpha subscribe to a community on instance.beta that would federate the community to your local instance, right? Is there something I'm missing?
Exactly. Trying to install the latest version of a bunch of apps on a base like Debian is bound to give you dependency issues if you try to install the native version.
I can only recommend you to look into using Flatpak to install graphical applications. It avoids the whole dependency or permission issues because it ships apps in their own well tested little sandbox. From a end user perspective its somewhat similar to how applications are bundled on macOS.
It works in a sense that it shows you a list of all your media in the app and syncs photos from your phone to the cloud.
But it doesn't make the features from within the photos app (albums, people, places) available in the app. That doesn't really compare to Apple / Google Photos sadly.
My main issue with Nextcloud is that the photos app still doesn't have any way to properly sync on mobile sadly :/
Photoprism at least has a PWA but it's still not ideal. That's the main thing keeping me on iCloud personally.
Considering the clashes system76 had with the GNOME team this seems to be going in a similar direction. Having a clearly defined way of theming applications instead of having themes just inject random css is the way to go in my opinion.
I'm really excited to finally try Cosmic DE myself!
Firefox Relay is the best platform agnostic option in my opinion. It's free to use for the basic variant and with Relay Premium you support Mozilla and can use custom domains as well.
I agree. But not everyone likes to do it that way and checking for email in the background should be at least an option in a modern email client in my opinion.
Essentially a web feed to have a single timeline from multiple sources.
Think of it as Google News but you manually choose the sources and it's chronological.
Sometimes it's useful following specific projects or organizations you're interested in to be notified when anything interesting is going on. In a way similar to an RSS feed I suppose
At least Brave forks Chromium and they have a bunch of patches they apply to the codebase.
I mean yeah, they still contribute to the Chromium monopoly but calling them just a rebrand is a bit unfair in my opinion
I remember reading about Lacros over a year ago and then never since. I pressumed this was dead but apparently not.
But I think this is a move in the right direction. Having the browser and desktop shell being the same component and only being able to update them as one piece seems like a very strange idea to me.
I don't think that's a bad thing. The Lemmy and the wider Fediverse are open and using a closed source client to access that doesn't change anything. Unlike with other closed ecosystems using a closed source client doesn't impact anyone else.
The health related reasons others gave are interesting, but my reasoning is this pretty simple: On normal weekdays I don't really have breakfast, so brushing my teeth as one if the first things makes sense. On weekends I like to have breakfast with my family so I'd like to get rid of morning breath before I talk to people.