I can appreciate following the creators intent and gave this a legit crack around when Gnome 40 first released. I fell back to using a DtP because I found it frustrating to not be able to see the main panel clock on my secondary displays when I have something open in full screen on the primary. My Mac and windows systems will have this shown on all displays, I guess I just became accustomed to it.
I genuinely enjoy using gnome but there are situations like this which are massively disappointing to behold. I don't feel bad making my own tweaks in light of their attitude towards assuming user behaviour without any sort of data to inform those decisions.
Appreciate the explanation. I've seen some remarks about the instance in passing, I've just never paid close enough attention to how communities have interacted with each other in the past.
Ironically I don't think kernel module AC was as big of an issue back then as it is now. It's sad to see games like Battlefield, GTAO and Apex pull the rug out from under.
Yes these games are almost always bad, but they have huge audiences. If a traditional, stationary console can't play them, I worry about how broad their appeal would be against incumbents.
Iirc, Acton donated to signal, they didn't go on to make it as an alternative. Signal existed long before he left, and even longer ago as open whisper systems' TextSexure, which was a means of SMS / MMS encryption.
That's fair. I quickly tested standard notes with it firewalled on my phone. it can be used offline and can be set up to require a passcode or biometric verification. Most significantly, the sync server can be self hosted, in case you do decide to pursue this avenue in the future.
The client apps are available on all platforms, including linux distros, though the desktop apps use electron and feel somewhat sluggish (it uses React Native for android and iOS which feels almost equally bad).
I've not attempted to use this completely offline but it seems to work acceptably. Bear in mind that the client apps can have subtle nags to subscribe to extended mode, which aren't present when self hosting.
That said, the default user flow emphasises on the use of an account with an email address, and I'm not sure that's what you want. I'm wondering if KeePassDX could be used for secure note taking, not sure if keepass entries have some kind of character limit though.
I'm curious about the cross platform requirement given the offline one. I'm wondering if Standard Notes or something similar can be used in a purely offline mode.
I'd hope that practically anything on Android today would suffice given the typical enforcement of either FBE/FDE. Do you specifically need an app that is password protected in addition to Android's device security, or is this more of an ask for desktop counterparts?
I'm using my kitchen S5 exclusively in aux mode with a spare phone which runs the Malopieds fork of Innertune. It's the perfect music kiosk / jukebox and I never have to touch their apps (unless I change up my network).
I'm not familiar with the first subreddit, what was that about?