Semperverus
while(true){💩};
- 1 Post
- 133 Comments
Sometimes. Most times they buy them to gut them for their patents. Fitbit and Pebble both probably had some patents that Google really wanted.
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Europe's plan to ditch US tech giants is built on open source - and it's gaining steamEnglish
2·6 months agoYep, just make sure to set the permissions so you’re not sending notifications to the other phone (if it’s someone else’s) or allowing remote control of yours. Just enable file sharing or whatever you want, and maybe allow them to do the find my phone ring thing.
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Europe's plan to ditch US tech giants is built on open source - and it's gaining steamEnglish
7·6 months agoWhen you and your wife send pics over KDE Connect instead is a powerful moment. Still requires one phone to connect to the other over hotspot or be on the same network at home, but its slick otherwise.
This happens to me when I run games sometimes in 4k at max settings, with a 7900XTX. So far I have not found anything that prevents it, and I’m starting to suspect my power supply or my house’s wiring might be the issue. It almost seems like a voltage sag.
Meshcore also has a paid license to use the full feature set and if Plex has taught us anything, it’s to stay away from garbage like that. I’ll stick to Meshtastic, thank you.
The fossify apps are legit, I use them daily.
This is the same or similar situation as OpenOffice → LibreOffice or OwnCloud → NextCloud (and to a lesser extent but more similar scenario, Audacity → Tenacity or various other forks).
This is what true open source looks like in action.
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Recommended mini linux device for streaming to TVEnglish
1·8 months agoBrowser+jellyfin is easy then, but again you need to make sure you’re not using google play services. That shit calls home like crazy.
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•KDE releases alpha build of KDE Linux, an immutable arch linux distroEnglish
16·8 months agoWith how KDE treats Plasma and their whole dev philosophy of “If we don’t use/like something, than neither will you”
How does anyone confuse the KDE team for the Gnome foundation? How did you manage to pull that off?
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Recommended mini linux device for streaming to TVEnglish
4·8 months agoLol. Lmao even.
If it has google play services on it, at all, there is absolutely no privacy.
If you can manage to stick to an F-droid+Aurora+Obtainium setup (maybe with IzzyOndroid enabled in F-droid), you can probably pull off privacy, but in my experience there are at least three major streaming services ive encountered that refuse to run if Google Play Services aren’t running and you can’t pass the SafetyNet authenticity/security check thing (which raspberry pi is missing the firmware and hardware to be able to support.) Netflix being the biggest of them, I think Disney Plus has issues, and it’s been a while since I tried but either crunchyroll or hbo Max gave me a hard time.
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Recommended mini linux device for streaming to TVEnglish
3·8 months agoThat’s what I do. I have a bunch of .desktop files that just open Firefox in kiosk mode to whichever website I want, and a bunch of .PNG files to make them look like apps. I installed them system-wide.
I’m a pretty big KDE Stan but I decided to give Gnome a go since Plasma Bigscreen is virtually impossible to install for a normal user at the moment. Its not perfect but it gets the job done, and I love the basic parental controls it has. Still absolutely awful in terms of settings though.
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Recommended mini linux device for streaming to TVEnglish
4·8 months agoAn Airmouse is a gamechanger.
Its a TV-remote-style device that works like a Wii remote to control the mouse, usually has a keyboard on the backside, and connects to a USB 2.4ghz or Bluetooth receiver depending on the model you get.
I got a $20 Rii and a $10 other brand one to try out. Both are fine. I like the buttons on the Rii better but it has no backlight which sucks because I’m usually watching TV in bed at 9pm. The $10 one’s keyboard also responds faster so I can actually speed type.
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Blogging platform Bear is no longer open source, moves to source-available Elastic licenseEnglish
11·8 months agoPeople are always angry and confused when i call MIT a grifter license
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Are distros really different or is it more about preference?English
3·8 months agoI don’t like how the manjaro team does it specifically. A lot of the time i’ve seen packages break in Manjaro that work fine in Arch, then Manjaro users come into Arch forums acting like its an Arch problem when it isn’t.
Also, their driver install helper causes more problems than it solves, which was especially highlighted in the transition to open source official nvidia drivers. Couldn’t install the open source ones for the longest time, and couldn’t install the right ones from the repo with pacman directly. Caused some major issues for a friend I was helping.
Helped him switch to proper Arch and all the issues went away.
Valve on the other hand puts extreme effort into maintaining stability. I use it regularly and have zero issues, though I use it as-is out of the box.
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Are distros really different or is it more about preference?English
13·8 months agoWorkflows are different, configuration files can be different, and package names (not just management) can be different.
Additionally, release cadence (how fast you get new stuff, even when considering fixed releases), stability, performance (how were the packages compiled), and custom patches that aren’t part of the original code (*shakes fist angrily at Manjaro*)
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•The JavaScript type coercion algorithmEnglish
6·9 months agoThis makes it make so much more sense…
Its not really insanity, just a lot of hidden function calls
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Looking for a FOSS Android custom control centerEnglish
2·9 months agoTwo thumbs
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Is Blender's DOGWALK Even Libre?English
311·9 months agoMIT is allow to be closed, so it’s free but not libre.
Semperverus@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Flathub has passed 3 billion downloadsEnglish
11·10 months agoI don’t like flatpaks or snaps or anything like it either, but I think they help a lot in situations like the Steam Deck or PinePhone where you want the base to be able to move slowly and be stable, while letting the apps on top move quickly.
The problems with flatpaks and similar is that it allows and even encourages developers to stick with horrendously outdated libraries, and your system is only as safe as the container’s isolation defenses.
They also make it more difficult to go in and directly modify or tweak the program as the user.
And many developers are no longer offering bare-metal options.

I feel like something like the xteink would be better suited to this class of device though