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Joined
5 mo. ago

  • Piefed allows you to disable notifications for a post at any time

  • Wasn’t the point of Apple always that they don’t sell the data to third parties and not that they don’t collect anything?

  • If it’s in the AUR you can use a arch distrobox container

  • Servo is a web browser rendering engine written in rust. It was originally started by Mozilla but then abandoned

  • Shirts That Go Hard @lemmy.world

    Stability

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    celeste rule

  • Molly uses Signals servers, meaning you can chat with people that use Signal. As far as I know Signal does allow for third party clients, so as long as their stance doesn’t change Molly should work. Differences between the versions can be found here

  • Funny @sh.itjust.works

    Very accessible

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    rule

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    rule

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    rule

  • Shirts That Go Hard @lemmy.world

    Classical proverb

  • Rule

    Jump
  • Dad Jokes @lemmy.world

    A man who was in court for stealing a bag took just three minutes to get sentenced...

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    :3rule

  • If you(they) don’t mind having outdated software Debian stable might be worth looking into. Otherwise there are immutable distros which are very hard to fuck up, and even if you do there is the option to rollback to the previous version. I’d recommend Aurora or Fedora (fedora doesn’t include some proprietary stuff like some codecs so if you need that it’s probably better to use Aurora).

    Linux Mint also has a version based on Debian stable, LMDE, which is could also be an option. It’s not as stable as Debian as it adds its own stuff but has the out of the box experience.

    As general advice I’d suggest using less packages and more flatpaks as a faulty flatpak update can only break that flatpak, not your system. For packages be sure to disable online updates, meaning you have to reboot to apply them. This isn’t as convenient but if stability is that important to you I’d go for it

  • Like this:

  • How you look writing that:

  • Funny @sh.itjust.works

    A master of deception

  • Okay so first there was Unix. It was semi Open Source and a bunch of companies were making different versions that were becoming increasingly incompatible. That is why POSIX was created, it standardizes major parts of Unix. Linux is a Unix like operating system, meaning it functions similarly but doesn’t share any code. One thing that POSIX standardizes is the shell meaning there’s a standard how a loop works etc. Most shell on Linux like bash and zsh are POSIX compliant but some (like fish aren’t). This means a command that works one way in bash might work differently in fish. Basic stuff is mostly the same in my experience so if you’re not having any problems you shouldn’t worry about being POSIX compliant. If you want most of the same stuff but POSIX compliant checkout zsh. Fish provides documentation for adjusting your commands so I’d just ignore it until you run into a problem and then take a look at the docks

  • linuxmemes @lemmy.world

    Fish rules

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    gullible rule

  • Because usually companies get founded. If you want to found a company you want investors. Investors don’t really invest in worker coops. That (and a few other reasons) mean most companies are formed as private companies. Worker coops mostly form when workers are sick of how they are treated and think they can do better on their own.

    A willing government could subsidize worker coops and encourage their creation to make them more common

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    broom rule

  • There are countries that were made democratic not by the people but their dictator/monarch. Why couldn’t the same happen with socialism?

    Also one should consider that (at least in the non Stalinist definition) socialism more or less just means worker coops. There are worker coops. There is the theoretical possibility that their numbers rise until private companies are basically non existent. Socialism doesn’t necessarily require a revolution.

  • As far as I’m aware Photopea is supposed to fill the same niche as GIMP or Photoshop, though I’m no expert in the field.

  • Have you tried Photopea? It’s browser based but very good

  • From their FAQ

    With WinApps you do the bulk of the setup manually, and there's no cohesive interface to bring it all together. There's a basic TUI, a taskbar widget, and some CLI commands for you to play with.

    WinBoat does all the setup once you have the pre-requisites installed, displays everything worth seeing in a neat interface for you, and acts like a complete experience. No need to mess with configuration files, no need to memorize a dozen CLI commands, it just works.

  • Why Chatgpt and not Gemini? Also why no vpn? You could have put VPN by Google

  • We have Wine / Proton of course and they can run a lot, but not everything is possible. WinBoat is different. Instead of running compatibility layers, it runs a real copy of Windows using Docker and KVM under the hood. The developer explains it should run basically everything unless "it requires strong GPU acceleration or kernel-level anticheat". It uses FreeRDP for showing the apps on your Linux desktop, enabling you to interact with them like you would with any other Linux app.

    I don’t want to sound rude, but maybe read the article and not just the headline before asking questions

  • From their FAQ

    With WinApps you do the bulk of the setup manually, and there's no cohesive interface to bring it all together. There's a basic TUI, a taskbar widget, and some CLI commands for you to play with.

    WinBoat does all the setup once you have the pre-requisites installed, displays everything worth seeing in a neat interface for you, and acts like a complete experience. No need to mess with configuration files, no need to memorize a dozen CLI commands, it just works.

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    WinBoat is a new Linux app to run Windows apps with "seamless integration"

    www.gamingonlinux.com /2025/09/winboat-is-a-new-linux-app-to-run-windows-apps-with-seamless-integration/
  • I recently switched to Blorp. It’s still somewhat early in development, but overall is really nice.