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The experience varies by country, here in Finland I haven't had a single banking app complain about an unlocked bootloader or a custom OS.


How can you do that? I've wanted to enable reader mode by default on Firefox but AFAIK it's not possible yet, so I just forget it's existence.


For safari on iOS at least: - settings - safari - scroll down to reader, tap, then enable the slider


MQA going away is probably a good thing, I never saw the appeal. Proprietary, requires licensing fees, why would you use it over the free and lossless FLAC?


I've settled with this one because it's really fast and preloads images, which makes looking through thousands of time-lapse photos a doable task, just holding the arrow key.I'd like a bit more editing capabilities but I understand it might be out of scope for a minimal image viewer.


I use Obsidian myself, which simply stores text in Markdown files. It essentially shares all the pros of plain text: it'll be readable in the future, I'm not stuck with a single platform, I can sync and sort them into directories.


And bonus: Obsidian-like apps are their own subcategory now. Once you start using one, you can usually just open the root folder in any of the other apps and give them a spin with very little setup.


This depends on you not using crazy plugins specific to Obsidian that require you to write custom Markdown.


When I switched to Obsidian, I decided to not use any third party plugins. For this very reason. Keep it simple enough that I can switch to something else later or just open the directory in Nvim or VSCode.

And also because they are not sandboxed.


What a coincidence, earlier this week I thought about changing the tires on my MTB to better suit my riding style, and I wondered if there are sites with extensive tire reviews.


Agree, I feel like there must be a better way to achieve what Flatpak does. I love it because it's the only major app platform on Linux that offers some form of sandboxing, but the download sizes get ridiculously large.


> it's the only major app platform on Linux that offers some form of sandboxing

What about Snap? I use it all the time on my Ubuntu machines and works perfectly fine. Even files sizes are waay more sane than Flatpack's.


There's always x11docker, which AFAICT is actually quite good about sandboxing/isolating the app from the system.


Most of the time the built-in emoji search works for me. Discord, Telegram etc. can show emojis by just putting the keyword between colons, iirc KDE, Gnome, Windows all have an emoji picker with search (Win + .)


Nice, sadly this is not available for Linux


It's nice to see that they changed their stance on MicroG and signature spoofing, IMO they were a bit too hesitant against it. It's implemented in a safe way fortunately, so that only MicroG can use the permission.


I've noticed the same and it's really frustrating, it just straight up redirects to the login page sometimes. I guess I'll have to accept the fact that it's closing down, visitors are not welcome. Can't view a single post or picture in the future but so be it.


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