Skip Navigation

Posts
13
Comments
572
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Speaking of third party apps, here's some recommendations:

    Android: FindroidWorks absolutely great, it's very rare that I even find a bug.

    iOS: SwiftfinI don't use iOS but this is the one I installed on my friend's phones.

    Linux (and maybe Windows): DelfinThis is a GTK 4 app for Linux and maybe it has a Windows build too but I didn't check. It's not perfect, there's bugs here and there but it mostly works fine. The developer isn't very active (which is understandable), so it would be nice if someone, who has the time for it, would help out.

    Here's also the official page with Jellyfin clients: https://jellyfin.org/downloads/clients/allIt doesn't seem to include Delfin though.

  • Sorry, didn't know that. But they only own the trademark to the name? (Not saying that that isn't bad enough already)

  • No, Java is owned by Oracle, Javascript has nothing to do with it

  • NSFW

    terminology

    Jump
  • KEEP CRANKIN' BROMATO SAUCE!!! DON'T LET ANYONE STOP YOU!!!!

  • Very interesting explanation, makes sense

  • Yeah, something like that

  • Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • I do 🤤

  • That was the case in the past but it's not true anymore. China is just the best in a lot of sectors and also oftentimes the only one who can produce certain things. Here's a video where someone tried to make a product in the US only, it explains a lot of that: https://youtu.be/3ZTGwcHQfLY

  • Keychron keyboard

  • But don't you see, the privatization makes it better. It allows the free market to innovate.

  • What could this mean? I'm at a loss.

  • VR on linux actually works just fine from my experience. I've never had a game not work. The big issue is just headset support. The HTC Vive and Valve Index are the only headsets with official drivers, since they were made by Valve. Standalone headsets, like the Quest for example, also work using ALVR. Anything else doesn't really work. There are open source drivers but they're not complete enough to be useable unless something majorly changed there since I last checked.

  • Bullshit. Actions speak louder than words.

  • You can export and import subscriptions and playlists in the settings

    For some reason I thought this was about Piped. But I know you can actually export your subscriptions and probably also playlists from yt somehow. I did that and imported them into Piped back when I started using it.

  • Can confirm that yt-dlp works perfectly for TikTok videos

  • No marginalized group was ever granted rights because they asked for it nicely. I think death should always be avoided and I'm fully against the death penalty and torture but when violence is the only way, the oppressed have every right to use it.

  • Thank you for telling me about Podlet. I've been using podman-compose for all my containers but I've thought about converting them to systemd units. The only thing I'm unsure about is whether it'll still be easy to access the container files. Currently I have a containers folder with a folder for each service inside it. Inside that, there's the compose.yml and the folders with the container data. I map all container folders, with data that needs to be kept, to a folder that sits right next to the compose file. If it's just temporary data (like caches), I oftentimes map it to a volume because it doesn't matter if I lose it. Do you know if I can still do it like this (or in a similar way) if I use systemd units?

  • Until you hit the overflow and it starts getting smaller again

  • I meant to write OnlyOffice 😭But thanks for pointing it out, I fixed it