It’s like vim but with lsp support out of the box and the keybindings make sense
It’s like vim but with lsp support out of the box and the keybindings make sense
Good to hear! I surely will give it a try, I’ve used nixos as my work distro for a little bit last year but they forced us to switch to Ubuntu.
Okay so how is it with Cinammon, mate xfce? I know it’s crap with Wayland and Xorg especially with nvidia drivers.
Kagi and Zen works for me
How is fractional scaling on Mint? On Ubuntu 24.04 it’s really crap (slow, blurry, flickering cursor, weird artifacts etc)
Started using Zen browser recently and it’s not bad! Basically Firefox but more stylish and more privacy. It syncs with my Mozilla/Firefox account so on mobile I just use Firefox.
And install python and install those dependencies before you can even run the thing
Thanks for the explanation
Surely the Tokyo tower is a specific product then? 🗼It costs money to visit, aren’t the other towers jealous?
Yeah their security track record as of late is pretty bad…
Oh I didn’t catch that my bad. I hope they get a work computer where this kind of stuff doesn’t interfere with private life!
Sounds easier to switch to another browser at that point
Rust or bust
Yeah the colors come from the os, my keyboard shows the monochrome one when I pick it. That was all very interesting!
Third and fifth result are about the correct one
Here are the same queries with Kagi (I was interested to see the difference)
deleted by creator
Got in touch with ProtonVPN support and asked about this. Here’s their reply:
Our engineers have conducted a thorough analysis of this threat, reconstructed it experimentally, and tested it on Proton VPN.
We concluded that:
- The attack can only be carried out if the local network itself is compromised
- Our Windows and Android apps are protected against it
- For iOS and macOS apps, you are completely protected from this as long as you’re using a Kill Switch and a WireGuard-based protocol (our apps use them by default, and if a user wants to use something other than WireGuard derivates, they’d have to manually set it up). Note that Stealth, WireGuard TCP and Smart protocol on iOS/macOS are all WireGuard-based.
- For our Linux app, we’re working on a fix that would provide full protection against it.
I got a kobo recently and noticed bad performance with some epubs, very slow loading times and page flips. If I convert the file kepub with calibre (requires a plugin) then it’s super fast but I don’t think there is calibre for phones.
I was curious so I tried to register with a Proton Pass alias which is @passmail.net and they also refuse those. I think they are afraid of services which allow to easily create multiple aliases, because people could create multiple accounts very easily (scammers maybe)? It’s a dumb rationale because it’s not much harder to create many Gmail accounts but that’s the only reason I can think of.