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Has it? I feel like Gnome has made great progress the last few years

I mean, they do have a free plan with 6,000 minutes

I don’t think so. Framework sponsors many more projects like Arch itself, Bazzite, Debian, FreeBSD…

https://frame.work/de/en/blog/framework-sponsorships


> As of Monday morning, half of the top ten free apps in Apple's app download charts in the UK appeared to be for VPN services.

> Proton VPN, an app offered by Swiss privacy tech firm Proton, told the BBC it had seen a 1800% spike in UK daily sign-ups over the weekend after age check rules took effect on Friday.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn72ydj70g5o


Marketing network security products is usually hard. Not any more. The practical effect of these so-called protection laws is to break shit across the entire Internet.

Last I checked, many of the top free VPNs on the App Store were dodgy no-name ones that probably funnel traffic through Russia. Well done UK government you saved the children.

The dodgy ones actually usually use you as an exit node for other users traffic as well as selling your connection commercially as a residential proxy

I’ve seen people do this on the router level with a proxy, with imgur being the example - all other traffic just went as normal but imgur traffic was sent through a VPN.

However it was a very complicated setup with many parts and a home server so I would definitely like to see a proper app built around this that just handles everything for you.


Openwrt with the policy based routing package can do this, and is simple to set up.

You just have to not look at your phone. I don’t mean “rotate your head away”, I mean just don’t look at it with your eyes. If your eyes aren’t looking at the phone it won’t unlock.

I’ve heard stories of people using the Meta smart glasses to help with reduced vision, i.e. asking the LLM assistant what you’re looking at, asking it to read a label, etc. The LLM assistant can see the camera feed so it is capable of doing that.

However things like the urgent warnings you mentioned don’t exist yet.

Hearing about the way people with bad vision use these glasses kind of changed my viewpoint on them to be honest; for the average person it might seem useless to be able to ask an LLM about what you’re looking at, but looking at it from an accessibility standpoint it seems like a really good idea.


Zen revolutionized my workflow!


This is just different syntax for nesting function calls (i.e. c(b(a(value))) becomes value | a | b | c), right? Definitely would make code more readable if this was just something in JS or a compiler where it’s the same as normally calling functions.


I mean, if they restrain your eyeballs to look at the phone…


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