First they tried to destroy FOSS, then they realized that they can make money and gain control using open source software, so now they pretend to support it. Microsoft is a monopolistic piece of garbage that I’m staying away from at all costs.
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First they tried to destroy FOSS, then they realized that they can make money and gain control using open source software, so now they pretend to support it. Microsoft is a monopolistic piece of garbage that I’m staying away from at all costs.
Or just installing Snap afterwards
That’s one of the dumbest things I ever heard
SimpleLogin has a free tier, which is limited to 15 aliases. But if you have a paid Proton subscription, you can connect your SimpleLogin account and you get the premium version.
Why would they shut it down? That wouldn’t make any sense whatsoever.
You can just use SimpleLogin or addy.io for that. Both even have Bitwarden integration.
Added it to the list.
LibreWolf is much better for privacy, it’s specifically optimized for that. It also ships much less bloat by default.
Have you tried Strawberry?
Unfortunately it’s not FOSS, just source-available
If you like gaming:
For the CLI:
Just use the Flatpak, it makes everything much easier:
https://flathub.org/apps/io.gitlab.librewolf-community
SteamOS is arch-based and immutable
Definitely check out The Linux Experiment on YouTube. DistroTube and Mental Outlaw also make great videos about Linux, some of them are more advanced though. If you need to learn how to use the Terminal, check out Learn Linux TV, as well as some other recommendations from these threads: https://lemdro.id/post/8480193 and https://lemmy.ml/post/15455439
You don’t need to, but the entire framework has been specifically designed around this GNOME development philosophy, making it basically unusable for anything else. There are much better frameworks like Qt (C++/QML, but has bindings for almost every language), Iced (Rust), Avalonia (if you use C#) and many others
Not libadwaita, but GNOME. GNOME apps are meant to be simple, and only do one single thing.
https://developer.gnome.org/hig/principles.html
The best apps do one thing and do it well.
Resist the pull to try and make an app that suits all people in all situations. Focus on one situation, one type of experience.
LocalSend has been great for me. It also works over NetBird or Tailscale. The same goes for KDE Connect.