not a weeb
trans rights 🏳️⚧️🏳️🌈
they/them
This also highlights the problem with a lot of communities moving to Discord, which inevitably ends up as repositories for critical information, but can’t be indexed by Google. Reddit is still valuable as a problem solving resource, and I hope they fix this API fiasco.
Elden Ring, I get why the game appeals to so many people, but the entire Soulsborne series as a whole just doesn’t appeal to me (because of gameplay style and fantasy setting).
$20 million? Microsoft will never financially recover from this!
It might represent a total change to the VR/mixed reality landscape, but that $3499 price tag is just killer.
Is it possible to get around this with user agent spoofing? Or maybe degoogled Chromium?
You can still use it to just read tweets, but I’ve never been a heavy Twitter user in the first place so I’m not sure if anything major is broken in Fritter beta.
Forgot one, Tachiyomi, if you read manga.
Some of the functionality was lost, such as clicking through the trending section to see trending tweets:
For the most part though, it works for reading tweet threads and viewing media, which is all I use it for now. If you’re installing Fritter through F-Droid, you have to install the beta- the old stable version was completely broken by Twitter’s API changes.
Bitwarden or KeePass as open source password managers. KeyPass is entirely local, unless you sync your password database on the cloud, and Bitwarden is cloud based but with the option to self host the server (I recommend Vaultwarden, it’s lighter and written in Rust).
Joplin for note taking, especially if you use Markdown.
KDE connect for sharing files quickly between desktop and mobile - it’s better than the proprietary fast share protocols I’ve tried.
Termux, for shell access and running Linux distros, albeit heavily limited.
Fritter as a Twitter client alternative, though I’m already avoiding Twitter for the most part.
DLSS doesn’t seem to work in any of the games I play, so I’ve been using FSR in games that support it. It’s not as good as DLSS but it does the job for now.
I use Fedora 37 workstation with the Nvidia proprietary drivers from RPM Fusion. Relatively painless install, with the option to sign the kernel module if you want to keep secure boot on. Only downside is the Nvidia drivers still don’t work great with Wayland, so I normally login with Gnome on X for gaming.
Not really, unless you’re a fan of the UI/UX changes.