Proton can also be used by other tools like Bottles. It’s very similar to Lutris but with a more general purpose focus, rather than just gaming.
None of the big VPN companies officially endorse use if their services for piracy or any illegal activities for that matter.
But to crack down on it they would have to keep logs on your activity and with that most of their legitimate use cases wouldn’t be valid anymore either.
Xorg is still available in RHEL 9 to my knowledge
It’s Fedora. Moving out the legacy cruft and focusing development on modern technologies is precisely what makes it great imo.
Me too. I’m glad to see them adopting wlroots and focusing on porting components like the panel first. This way we can run the DE on compositors like labwc and the Xfce developers don’t need to waste resources on reinventing the wheel by writing a compositor from scratch.
This is amazing! Honestly a no brainer feature. Having to create an account just to contribute on one project’s instance is not a great experience currently and the reason I mainly stick to Github.
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.
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?
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.
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.
Also worth mentioning is that this version enables support for Wayland-only builds on Linux. In my experience Firefox on Wayland has worked great for at least the past ten version, so it seems like a good idea to make X11 support optional at build time now. Though I doubt any mainstream distros will build it like this by default.
Closest I could find is this mug and of course it’s on Etsy.
YouTube doesn’t have invasive DRM (on normal videos), playing any resolution works on Linux. Netflix only ever plays in 720p for me however, regardless of browser (you can check the stats with crtl + alt + shift + d). There are extensions for Firefox and Chrome to fix this issue luckily. But if Google’s DRM for the web goes through this might not be so easy anymore.
I can’t speak for your particular interests, but in my experience there is something for pretty much every niche. That’s what keeps YouTube in their dominant position as well.