We can already view PeerTube channels in the “Microblogging” tab, as that’s the way PeerTube federates to other services.
At least in theory that should be the case
17 year old Tech enthusiast and Cat lover from Germany.
You can also find me on Mastodon at @Rush
We can already view PeerTube channels in the “Microblogging” tab, as that’s the way PeerTube federates to other services.
At least in theory that should be the case
I still prefer PeerTube.
(it’s part of the Fediverse. We’re also part of the Fediverse here on Kbin and Lemmy.)
NixOS can become quite complex, so maybe stay away from it until you know more about how to manage your system ;)
The other options you’ve mentioned here are good, but EndeavourOS is based on Arch, so that may be contradictory to what you’ve said earlier.
It isn’t just a fork, its a collection of tools and patches around wine tailored for a specific purpose.
DXVK, VKD3D and other components aren’t part of Wine or Proton’s Wine builds, for example. They’re extra tools used on-top of Wine.
RSS never fails me.
I don’t really see Fedora maintainting a patched version of audacity as a fault of Flatpak, though.
Flathub is designed to allow developers to publish their own software in the way they intended. So Flathub and Flatpak are doing exactly what they’re designed to do
Let’s paraphrase to “CLI applications are quite cumbersome to use under Flatpak as per the current implementation”.
Unless you set up your own aliases, you’ll have to write out commands like flatpak run ...
, and if you don’t know the package name yet you’ll need to run flatpak list --app
first as well
I hope that in the future, Flatpak gets some improvements for exporting CLI utilities into the user’s environment.
Users upping permissions is not something that Flatpak is to blame for.
Flatpak has set the groundwork for sandboxing of desktop apps with a runtime permission system. People dont yet know how to properly use it.
The problem here is that most packages aren’t maintained by developers, but rather by independent package maintainers from respective distributions.
In my eyes, this adds another potential point of failure outside the control of the developer of a given tool.
Hm, I find it somewhat annoying that right now, this is not really searching the Fediverse, but rather what we’ve come to call “the Threadiverse”, which is all about Reddit-like content aggregators.
In other words, I’d love an option to search different kinds of content, like instead of Threadiverse-stuff searching the most popular mastodon, misskey, or pleroma instances just to name a few.
Pro Tip:
instead of linking to magazines with their links, do it something like this:
@BotIt@kbin.social
@BotIt
This way no matter what server you’re viewing from, you’ll stay logged in.
Even if they are coming, I don‘t think any of us which are already here will switch back. They should‘ve thought of this before they broke their platform.