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Nobody asking themselves how they got all these details of that person?
Reddit doesnt require a full name.
Nobody asking themselves how they got all these details of that person?
Reddit doesnt require a full name.
Finally! Their deb was broken even on Ubuntu, and Appimages are no real option.
But the size is insane, Electron is really an issue.
Also, the app just works if your phone is in the same LAN, and requires an open port which is also randomized, so secure firewall configs are very problematic, as you need to open the port manually every time.
Horrible… this is just horrible. The Android app is 300MB and it is the actual client.
The Desktop app is just a relay “receiver”, it doesnt work without the phone.
And it also uses a randomized port everytime which you need to allow, every time… at least using normally secure firewalls.
So this is actually fake news.
Wow.
Here we go again.
Luckily the thread is already in slow mode
Secureblue ships Chromium, is lead by a single person and does not care about privacy “if it leads to worse security” (i.e. preinstalling Chromium and removing Firefox, even though there is no evidence that Chromium is not even less secure)
Well either uBlues “variant focus” got too much or you are just really lazy
Librewolf uses Torbrowser configs, Mull uses the Torbrowser repo and entire config.
Torbrowser always uses the private browsing mode, which is really restrictive. Tabgroups do not work, cookies cannot be saved etc.
This makes MullvadBrowser way worse for daily browsing.
Torbrowser cannot use normal browsing mode, because they want to avoid saving data on the disk. Everything is in RAM.
Librewolf and Torbrowser both include hardening and privacy optimizations.
Kind of separately, but Librewolf, Mull (Android) often take the configs of Torbrowser.
So calling them opposite makes no sense. They may just leave out some settings.
Where do you get that Servo is Google backed?
I think he installed the snap because it had that?
But yeah, the flatpak is official (even though there are missing plugins)
Btw
My favourite quote of the day
Like everything in this fucking IT world, it’s pain in the ass.
True.
Very true, but there are some packages not available. And Appimages have partial updates now, and dont need huge libraries but just the stuff they need.
It is semi-rolling. They ship different point releases and kernels within a release
No, Fedora is semi-rolling with less random freezes. Regular Ubuntu is similar but just not Ubuntu please.
Fedora also had 13 months of support so staying on the older version gives an extra stability.
And then there is OpenSUSE slowroll, which is CI/CD with more testing
Fedora Atomic has no liveUSB
Yes I think you mentioned the relevant points here. Ubuntu tests their preinstalled software, while there is tons more in the repos that is not as tested. Same with Mint.
And they backport only stuff they think is necessary. For example Plasma 5 is based on the EOL Qt5 and backporting things to Plasma 5 is nearly impossible as you need real Plasma devs and nobody really wants to do that.
Plasma 6 is really stable, 6.1 not so much, but the timing was not perfect. Simply because they do their release schedule as fixed as that.
It is a total pain if you simply want working software, as they may backport some stuff, but all the stuff not preinstalled, or that is very complex, will not get fixes.
This is the same with all stable distros, if the maintainers dont literally maintain all the software there is.
And way more reliability, even though it is pretty modified.
It is randomly frozen as not all developers follow Ubuntus release schedule. They just release when it is ready.
Stability means backporting tons of bugfixes to tons of small packages and libraries. I dont think Ubuntu does that for enough packages, best example Plasma 5.27 on Kubuntu. I have reported over 200 bugs I guess and most of the newer ones are just fixed in Plasma 6.
Flatpak for sure is a good way, and if a distro is stable, they should only install Flatpaks.
If you do interesting stuff, use a good VPN. But those will also have to either delete their logs (Wireguard is actually worse here) or be brave.
Or Tor…