Or Tmate if you use Vim (or another CLI editor, or basically anything in the Terminal)
Or Tmate if you use Vim (or another CLI editor, or basically anything in the Terminal)
Signal is still great for cross-platform rich messaging, sending photos and videos with good quality (unlike with SMS), as well as voice and video calls. It also has fantastic desktop apps, similar to how you can use iMessage on your Mac, but Signal works on Linux and Windows as well. And you don’t need to be a criminal to care about your privacy.
May I ask why you don’t use it?
Or NextDNS
If you don’t need to configure everything yourself, you can also check out Mullvad’s public DNS or dnsforge
Immich is funded by FUTO btw
An Alpine user, cool! What is it like to use it as your primary desktop OS? I have only played around with it on servers or in VMs and containers.
Paru > yay
On Arch I don’t need any, I just run paru
without any options, which by default invokes a full Pacman update, as well as updating all AUR packages. But I have a system maintenance script, that, besides doing some other stuff that’s specific to my system, runs paru -Sc --noconfirm
to clean the Pacman package cache, and delete unneeded cloned AUR Git repos and build artifacts.
It’s impressive how many things can be achieved with nothing more than the power of open source software
The new Element X is written in Rust and thus memory-safe. SchildiChat Next is based on it.
Fluffychat and Syphon are pretty good
I think Avalonia is pretty great for C# cross-platform UI stuff. JetBrains Rider is the best C# IDE on Linux.
Finding anything FOSS with Spotify integration will be basically impossible. Clock You is a great clock/alarm app in general, of course no Spotify integration though. But you can choose custom music you have downloaded on your device.
OSS Document Scanner is great. It’s also available in the IzzyOnDroid F-Droid repository: https://apt.izzysoft.de/fdroid/index/apk/com.akylas.documentscanner
I agree