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Posts
2
Comments
172
Joined
1 yr. ago
  • I guess the closest I know of is Maps.me and Organic Maps? Maps.me was open source, but got purchased and enshittified, so Organic Maps was forked from it. And now there is some drama with the Organic Maps shareholders/co-founders, so unless that is (or has it already been?) sorted out we're likely to see another fork of it.

    Please correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't the main dev(s) members of lemmy.ml? So I can certainly see how differing political views could skew the development of the main branch of Lemmy.

  • The protocol itself could surely start its journey if enshittification? In which case different, possibly incompatible, branches would spawn fragmenting the Lemmy space. Still miles better than the whole thing burning to the ground. But with no shareholders looming around (yet) we can hope it won't come to that.

  • I do unfortunately still use it for my VR sim racing. But half of that is because I got a quest 3 as an entry point for VR. I'd love to get one where you don't have to fiddle around with video compression and WiFi latency.

  • I can agree with it for elderly people and/or people with a sever chronic condition who have little to keep suffering for. But for younger people with "fixable" problem I would hope we first male sure they get all the support they could need and want before euthanasia becomes an option. I know we aren't anywhere close pretty much anywhere in the world, but in the interim until we get there? I don't know, be angry at politicians and voters until they stop gutting public health care maybe.

  • I would personally recommend popos or mint. I have varying amount of experience with the others.

    Bazzite is very hyped on Lemmy, I don't quite understand how it works, it seems good for what it is, but I don't know if I would recommend it as someone's first Linux daily driver.

    Manjaro seems great most of the time, until the maintainers mess something up and royally screw up your system. But that's just things I've heard, your milage will vary.

    Nobara worked really well for me, but ultimately I wasn't very comfortable to use a distro maintained by one guy, even if that guy is glorious egg roll.

    I personally use popos. I wish it was fedora based like Nobara, but you can't have it all. Wow works straight out the box. There are appimages or deb packages for warcraft logs and curse as well, so they work fine.

  • That's something that bothers me in the UK. Many businesses are ran out of terrace houses. Especially dentists. They can look alright on the inside, but it really gave me the ick when looking for one and only seeing a dingy row of houses on google maps.

  • He partially has lungs and a vocal chord ?

    Though it reminds me of a conversation you can over hear in one of the Divine Divinity Baldurs Gate games between two skeletons, who talk themselves into how they shouldn't function, and then promptly fall to the floor in a pile.

    Edit: corrected the game

  • Looks like Warzone is one of the unfortunate ones, the kernel level anti cheat currently stops it from working on Linux.

    Reka (added to my wishlist 😄) seems to run well. If it will run straight out the box or not seems to be a little hit and miss. You can check any troubleshooting steps on protondb. This shows Linux isn't quite at the "it just works" stage. But for this title if you do run into an issue it seems like an easy fix.

    Cyberpunk runs really well. I haven't had to tweak anything for my install.

  • I have a very extensive steam, gog, and battle.net library with all kinda of games from wolfenstein 3D to Baulders Gate 3. The only game I haven't been able to run is Ground Control 2, but that doesn't work on windows 10 (possible a USB device issue). Unless you play a game with an anti cheat that explicitly deny Linux (the only one I know off the top of my head that does that is Fortnite) you are most likely good to go. I'm quite a performance/fps snobb, and I haven't found any game that runs worse on Linux either.

  • Funnily enough that is the exact situation I got. Parents started paying for Spotify almost 2 decades ago, and the great people they are have just kept it going since for me. I do have a YouTube premium (I know this is a bit frowned upon on Lemmy) sub going, but YouTube Music just doesn't quite function the way I want it to.

  • It's kinda offical but not quite. It's ported over and distributed by some Spotify engineers who wants to use it for Linux, but as far as I can tell, officially as a company Spotify don't support Linux as a platform. Source: https://www.spotify.com/us/download/linux/

  • Wow, that's a fantastic write up! Very cool to hear from someone who has used all the major platforms. I'm leaning towards Tidal, but they all seem to work quite well for everyone in here. I think what I'm going to do is dedicate a month to each service, write down my experiences with it, and go from there. Deezer has the free trial, so could start with that. Some other people in this thread has noted about the non-sorting of downloaded tracks and other questionable UI choices, so I'll keep an eye out for that.

    I didn't expect to find any native apps, even Spotify's client is an unoffical distribution, but I'm glad to hear they all have something available at least. I'm intrigued by Cider, seems like one hell of a project.

  • Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world
    HereIAm @lemmy.world

    What music streaming platform do you use?

    So I want to swap off of Spotify. Most of the time it works great, but the annoyances with their UX are starting to build up. From not ordering albums in release order on certain screens, to having to wait a good few seconds before turning off their shuffle+, and their shuffle not being very shuffle-y to begin with.

    I have a couple of requirements:

    • A decent Linux client.
    • Be able to easily select playback device from other devices (for example start playback on my PC from my phone).
    • Preferably pretty straightforward UX philosophy, i.e. haven't started going down any enshitification with AI, "we know best" kind of elements.

    I don't particularly care for the highest of lossless quality audio. I don't posses any audio equipment where I would have any shot of telling the difference. As long as its not the experience I had with YouTube music where some random persons heavily compressed upload of a song would start playing.

    My main contenders are Tidal, Qobuz, and deezer. The latter

    Android @lemmy.world
    HereIAm @lemmy.world

    Third party keyboards no longer accepted by HSBC's banking app.

    In a recent update to the HSBC app they've added a screen to prevent you from using the app unless you use the default (google) keyboard.

    They do a similar thing if you have an accessibility service running that can access the screens content. A fair enough security warning if you've happened to install a dodgy keyboard app, but highly frustrating when using an open source alternative that enhances the security and privacy over the default option (HeliBoard in my case).

    I haven't found a way to circumvent the page yet. It would be useful if Android allowed you to block the permission to query all packages, but alas.