Well worth a read. The video swapping between Wayland compositors with a single button like it was nothing is freaking magic.
Plasma 6 and Wayland looks so promising :D
Well worth a read. The video swapping between Wayland compositors with a single button like it was nothing is freaking magic.
Plasma 6 and Wayland looks so promising :D
No, Safaris engine is called WebKit. It's different, but they're related:
Once upon a time there was KHTML. Apple forked it to make WebKit. At some point Google forked WebKit to make Chromium. So now WebKit and Chromium development has diverged from each other over the years.
Anyway, use Firefox :)
Firefox is made by a non-profit for the purpose of making a web browser, it's not made by a giant corporation for the purpose of pushing ads.
Git Bash also works quite well without WSL (but I think it just uses Cygwin under the hood)
There's also Kate, the KDE Advanced Text Editor. It's available from the Windows store, and works amazingly well on Windows, fast snappy and (almost?) just as featurefull as on Linux. I use it side by side with Notepad++
Thirding a reverse proxy. Probably Nginx Proxy Manager (NPM) is the easiest reverse proxy to get started with, if you don't want to deal with plain nginx config files
Thanks for sharing, Markor looks promising
Markor also has support for Zim Wiki, so I tried it out with some files from my Zim Desktop Wiki notebook, and it sortof works! Markor renders correctly, though I had some problems getting embedded images to work, because Markor didn't find the images using the same relative URLs as Zim Desktop Wiki uses.
Awesome! 😎 thanks for chiming in with your experience
Can we expect to do in-place upgrades from KDE5 to KDE6, or will it require a full re-install?
Let's say upgrade from Kubuntu 23.10 with Plasma 5.27 to Kubuntu 24.04 with Plasma 6.0 (assuming Kubuntu ships 6.0)
Hmm, yeah there's no mention of cloud sync, and it advertises using "androids native SQLite database" as storage backend, which I imagine means you can't use a third party sync app like FolderSync or Nextcloud app which works with files.
"This project showcases the Good implementation of Android with proper architecture design"
Is hiding away text notes in a database rather than plain text files really what's considered "proper architecture design" these days?
Cool, Obsidian didn't even cross my mind, thanks for the suggestion.
For mobile, just reading and ticking of existing items covers the main use cases for me. And sometimes adding new items too. That's soo cool that the Sleek Dev added support for arbitrary extensions. I love when FOSS Apps become interoperable on the same dataset like that. Yay for data portability :D
Time to try out Obsidian then
True, and so all honour to the creators for remaining FOSS, especially smaller projects spearheaded by a single dev
Altough usually when a shift like that happens in bigger projects there's a community fork, and the original project withers. Like Owncloud -> Nextcloud , OpenOffice -> LibreOffice, MySQL -> MariaDB
You could argue there's some degree enshitification through the Ubuntu snapification driven by Canonical. Although that's not so much about making Ubuntu deliberately worse, it's more moving Ubuntu forward in a way that aligns with Canonical's strategic goals. So its "paying the strategy tax" rather than direct enshitification.
For collaborative projects like Linux I believe every contributor would need to agree to any license change, which is practically impossible
Sadly Obsidian is not open source or free as in free speech. For individuals it is free as in free beer though