fleg

joined 4 years ago
[–] fleg@szmer.info 7 points 11 months ago (3 children)

Looks like YunoHost, but hearing about the licensing issues, I'll stick with YunoHost.

[–] fleg@szmer.info 34 points 11 months ago

I don't think that this is related to Wayland.

[–] fleg@szmer.info 31 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I do - because shipping with Windows means that I pay for a Windows license when buying the product.

[–] fleg@szmer.info 6 points 1 year ago

I did! Don't expect too much stability out of it, but I was surprised to say that the latest version worked pretty stable and nicely for me. I can definitely recommend it.

[–] fleg@szmer.info 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Unpopular opinion: non-pro can handle the OS just fine and then some. Try out SailfishOS (unfortunately not OSS) - it's as smooth as butter. Or UBPorts - it works great (unfortunately both Sailfish and UBPorts aren't as polished when it comes to actual hardware support on PinePhone, but they show nicely what could be done). I don't think I even need to mention Sxmo, which is no surprise that it works great, but its approach is definitely not for everyone.

It's just Gnome/Plasma that are mainly developed for "big" computers and are pretty wasteful. But the situation is definitely improving.

[–] fleg@szmer.info 6 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)
[–] fleg@szmer.info 0 points 2 years ago

Matrix works, but it's way harder and more expensive to selfhost than for example XMPP, which can be hosted even on cheapest VPS or first RPi. I would definitely take the cost and "how hard is it to maintain in the long run" into consideration.

Mattermost also works and is pretty easy to selfhost, but it doesn't have federation.

Another option is always an email with delta.chat - I don't think it offers voice calling, but email is one of the most basic services one can host, and many automated solutions to help with that exist.

[–] fleg@szmer.info 2 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Vim/Emacs/… starter kits achieve the same experience.

Which Vim/Emacs/... starter kit sets up the same keyboard navigation model as Helix uses? I think that it's its main strength, the selection -> action approach, which is quite intuitive (at least for me once I've tried) is what really matters in Helix. The rest is just an addition, the one that makes it a quite competent and convenient environment to work with, but an addition.

[–] fleg@szmer.info 2 points 2 years ago

I have a PinePhone and the article is on point.

My understanding is: Android is here for many years now. When it was just released I got the HTC G1 and it was only barely better than what Mobian + Phosh present right now. Add to that many years of polishing by some of the most powerful corporations out there and you end up with Android as it is today.

Mobile Linux made unbelieveable progress. It is, in my opinion, almost as usable as a dumb phone as first Androids were. The problem is as others have pointed it out, we need people working tirelessly on thankless polishing of everything around it. It's hard without throwing money at that issue.

[–] fleg@szmer.info 1 points 2 years ago

Not if you're willing to flash your own firmware, what is often possible: https://tasmota.github.io/docs/ (and others)

Most of the time it requires opening the switch and connecting to the serial port that's inside more or less exposed. Nothing especially difficult, but can be a little intimidating at first. It's not easy to fail, though, and those switches are so cheap that even if you manage to break it somehow then the loss is not great.

[–] fleg@szmer.info 2 points 2 years ago
  • ranger and mc - both are file managers, and their approach is so different that I choose one of them I need at the moment depending on what do I want to do (mc for traditional file management, ranger for looking around the directory tree and peeking into files)
  • htop, tmux - classics
  • weechat, profanity - for my IM needs
  • ripgrep - for searching through files
  • magic-wormhole for file and ssh public key exchange
  • mosh for when the network conditions aren't ideal
  • nmap to see if that machine I've connected into the network is up and what IP did it get
  • bat for quick looking into files
  • gdb, with mandatory gdb dashboard
  • nvim for serious text and code editing, micro for more casual editing
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