![](https://feddit.de/pictrs/image/a1716c05-8cc1-4514-b0bc-06b3d8ac6abf.jpeg)
Sure, here!
If you notice any quality loss due to the upload, just tell me, and I can share it to you in full quality, or upload an album.
Sure, here!
If you notice any quality loss due to the upload, just tell me, and I can share it to you in full quality, or upload an album.
It is in fact part of the launcher. You can change it in the settings of the homescreen and decide between a digital or a round version.
Thanks! I’ll do that too, thanks for the suggestion!
Debian is community run, which often means all changes and features get implemented because the community wants that, not some corporation. One notable example of that is Snap.
Also, I found (minimal install) Debian a bit more minimalist than Ubuntu server, which is great imo. I just want the bare minimum for my services to work, and pretty much the only thing I expect from my server to have is SSH and Docker.
Debian. I don’t see much benefit of Ubuntu LTS compared to plain old Debian. It’s exactly what you wanted.
Alternatively, AlmaLinux is a good choice if you like Red Hat stuff (RHEL clone), but the difference between Ubuntu LTS and Debian would be almost not noticeable for you I think.
Thanks for sharing your view point, makes sense. Totally understandable!
Sadly, I’m nowhere qualified/ capable enough to host a reasonable website, let alone one that collects content like I imagine it to be.
Exactly that is my point. By applying stricter rules to posting, including tagging, we could create exact that database.
I use Unixporn similar to how other people use Pinterest for decorating their home, not only to see cool setups. I personally think that my use case is also valid and not that rare.
If people already make the effort to post, why not make that more searchable and give others like myself the ability to filter?
Understandable.
I personally often use Unixporn similar to how other people use Pinterest when they want to get inspired for decorating their room.
I really can’t deny the accusation that this community is responsible for “some” of my DE-hops 😅
My recommendation would be to use Logseq.
It’s similar to Obsidian (“Second Brain”/ PKM), but with the journal function as backbone.
It relies heavily on crosslinking, is markdown-based, very efficient and a joy to use once you “got” it, and supports a hell lot of features, including TODO, plugins, a knowledge network (“graph view”) and much more.
I use it for everything (external brain) and pretty much never loved a piece of software this much!
It sounds like it is THE tool you’re searching for!
I made a similar post a few weeks ago.
I will try uBlue core and give you all a small update about it.
I feel similar about Debian. It’s a good distro for sure and I don’t have any issues with it for server use, but somehow, I still don’t like it somehow. RPM-/ OSTree based distros are more my taste, and I don’t even know why.
Because containers (Distrobox, Flatpak, etc.) are bae.
You can read my post I made a while ago for more information: https://feddit.de/post/8234416
Once you “get” image based distros, you probably never want to go back. Traditional distros just feel… off now for me.
Containerisation is the biggest strength in Linux, we use it all the time on servers, so why not on the desktop?
Atomic OSs just make more sense for me, not only because of security/ bug/ whatever reasons, no, also because they feel simpler and are pretty convenient and robust.
Read my post if you want to know more: https://feddit.de/post/8234416
You can build your own image easily using uBlue.
You change the system from top to bottom, not bottom to bottom like on traditional distros. Read my post if you want to know more: https://feddit.de/post/8234416
You can try out different MacOS-like themes.
There were quite a few options/ flags for Mac theming in the documentation, and after looking at some screenshots, I find them quite similar and fitting.
Here are two popular ones: First and another one
Looks fucking awesome!
There aren’t enough light theme setups out there, and yours looks very clean and well thought out. I especially like that the shadows of the window decorations are better visible on the light theme, that gives it a way better spacial look than on dark ones.
The only thing I would change personally, if I would copy it, is the right area of the top bar, that one looks a bit too crowded for me compared to the rest of the more minimalist setup.
I would drag the widgets, except the tray, onto the desktop or so.
Please also don’t forget to link your themes (and other stuff) used or customized in the post, for others to recreate :)
I think 4 a year is better than 3. With 4, you can just do a quarterly thread, which is easier.
I think the concept of megathreads could be executed a bit better. In the way it is suggested in the post, it’s only a poll about preferences and popular choices we all use anyway.
I’m thinking about the idea to make a weekly category collection, where we can discuss specific things in more detail.
E.g. “[Weekly thread] What browser do you use? (07/2024)”, where we can debate why one prefers Mull over Fennec, what problems we had with Vanadium, and so on.
Or, what niche apps we found this month.
Or, what FOSS app exceeds it’s proprietary counterpart.
And so on, and so on. I can give you 20 topic suggestions in less than 2 minutes 😅
This would generate much more engagement and value imo.
And then, we can just simply link each weekly discussion in the quarterly mega thread with one bottom line each.
In that way, everyone would have more resources to read further into, and it’s more organized.
Also, this would prevent routine. We don’t need a “Which gallery app do you use, and why is it simple gallery?” every time.
We can come up with many new ideas each week, and then, every megathread is different and still worth reading into a few years from now.
Getting more than one vote is simple, too simple. It should be linked with why you think that way and use that tool.
Lemmy is a discussion site, not one for popular opinions and polls. I think engagement is the highest priority, both for strengthening the community, and for the SEO to rank Lemmy higher than Reddit some time in the future 🙃
And linking it to upvotes is bad, that’s not the purpose of them. We can still upvote suggestions we disagree with, but that are argued good and add value.
Tittle Im thinking: [Megathread] FOSS Apps — Lemmy Edition | You like? Or do you want another?
Not recognizable enough imo. It will go under in less than a year. What about
[Megathread] Summary of your favourite FOSS Android apps | Community picks for Q3-2024!
?
Feel free to discuss!
I think both are equally great and it’s more about taste.
Logseq is an outliner, so basically everything is written in bullet points. For my type of thinking, that’s great. Obsidian is more about longer notes.
You can archive both with extensions, so it’s about you what you prefer.
Logseq. Linear To-Do-lists aren’t for me, and in Logseq, I can do it organically
Logseq. I love it so much I bought the sync-access to support the project!
Do you use it on the stock ROM or on GrapheneOS/ another system?
GrapheneOS for example applies some “app optimisations” after system updates, and because of that, Kvaesitso gets some performance issues, namely extreme stuttering.
When reinstall the app or delete some data, it works again. Did you try that?