Well, when I first started using this and saw that a list of communities was in the menu of the top left button. After I logged in, I was kind of expecting that a list of the communities that I’m subbed to didn’t appear.
It would just make things easier and would be more intuitive for new users of this app. Especially since most other Lemmy clients have, and do, basically the same thing; have a user-subscribed section in that kind of section.
Also, with bookmarks, you can only bookmark posts not communities.
GOD DAMN! I knew seagulls were powerful. I didn’t know that seagulls had the power to smell through chip bag plastic.
This is especially shocking for someone who lives in the lower half of southern California, 30 minutes away from multiple beaches.
The audacity that people have to assume that you, me, or anybody has a head.
I HATE that I am still in the habbit of doing esc :wq whenever I want, or need, to save and quit.
But you should be using Arch instead ot Mint.
(I use Arch BTW)
Yep, all front end or services.
Also, I recommend giving Linux another shot. There are many distros that work as expected out of the box; The primary one I recommend is Nobara. Nobara is a Fedora based distro made by GloriousEggroll, the same GloriousEggroll behind ProtonGE and WineGE. It has a custom kernel with additional patches to help make the performance of some things better. It is a gaming focused distro, but that doesn’t mean you can’t use it for day-to-day tasks.
NewPipe is a YouTube frontend (on android), it’s like invidious minus the “instance” part, where it basically just grabs the video directly and just plays that. With NewPipe the video still gets views on YouTube’s end, I don’t think videos watched through invidious count towards the view count on YouTube’s end.
Freetube is something that I’ve seen and/or heard of once or twice; because of that, I can’t really say what it is. It’s definitely something that is either like NewPipe or Invidious. (I have only heard about it once or twice due to being a Linux user (I use Arch BTW) and stubling upon it’s github repo.)
I really only ever watch YouTube on my phone and because I’m an Android user, I have heard of NewPipe and been aware of it for quite a while. Invidious I know about for kind of the same reason. There’s an Android app called LibreTube that is basically a frontend for Piped. (Piped is either an alternative to Invidious or is an instance of Invidious, or just straight up uses Invidious as like a backend. Don’t entirely remember)
You Should. Firefox has gotten so much Better. Not to mention all the literal BULLSHIT Google has done and will be doing with their browser.
The way Chrome works now, every tab is its own instance. Firefox, each window is its own instance.
I am an Arch user and have been using hyprland on it for a while.
I only asked about how it is on fedora cuz I’ve been considering switching to nobara. The only thing keeping me back is that I love to tinker. I know Arch is the best for that, but I’m considering dual-booting both with Nobara being used for gaming (although I will switch to like kde (x11), or i3 for gaming along with any graphically intense programs due to having an Nvidia card) and just about everythung else but will be keeping arch for whenever I want to like really tinker with something.
Checked out that repo and may have to check it on a computer later.
Thanks a lot!
How has your experience been with hyprland on fedora?
Since hyperland is bleeding edge and almost always requires like the latest versions of some packages, did you need to use packages from fedora rawhide, or use an older version of hyprland due to the versioning of hyprland’s dependencies?
What is needed to keep it well maintained? I know there’s a copr repo due to being a package that is too bleeding edge, and assuming you are using the copr repo (that is mentioned on the hyprland wiki), does the hyprland package get updated whenever the dependencies, not including the build dependencies, are updated in the main repo?
I would love to try it out, though I’m an Arch user, but it all depends on what needs to be done prior to installing it, or how much maintenance is required to prevent it from breaking or even just crashing.
Correction… *THE incest state. When people talk about incest, at least one person is gonna think about Alabama.
I agree.
If a browser ain’t open source, I ain’t gonna use it and neither should anyone else.
I’m an Android user, but luckily I never really got lost in google’s sauce.
I’m pretty sure I used Chrome early on in my Android days but not for very long.
Currently, and for the foreseeable future, my primary browser on Android is Firefox Nightly and I do run firefox on all my computers (I do use Linux).
I second Kdenlive.
Not too familiar with it, but what I do know is that it is an incredible video editor.
The US incest state.
Yes. 100%
No clue about video editing though.
Also, why the FUCK would you use Blender as a video ed nxitor. That is one of the last things you use Blender for.
That sounds about right
Yeah, I was missing half of that part. I knew about the button but not the swipe to access. That would make sense.
In that case, maybe consider a guide or short tutorial for when people first install the app. Or something in the settings page showing how things can be accessed and whatnot.
Cuz a lot of this is stuff I probably would have never figured out and the same is very likely true for many others as well.