RmDebArc_5
- 12 Posts
- 14 Comments
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipto
memes@lemmy.world•Protip: disable the Google AI summary by adding "-ai" to the end of your searchEnglish
39·2 months agonoai.duckduckgo.com to also disable the AI in ddg
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Fight Chat Control - Protect Digital Privacy in the EU - use this to EMAIL YOUR REPRESENTATIVESEnglish
0·4 months agoConsidering Chat Control had a majority, just not a large enough one, it seems unlikely such a law could pass
Wasn’t the point of Apple always that they don’t sell the data to third parties and not that they don’t collect anything?
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Can there be privacy with Google Play Services?English
0·6 months agoMolly uses Signals servers, meaning you can chat with people that use Signal. As far as I know Signal does allow for third party clients, so as long as their stance doesn’t change Molly should work. Differences between the versions can be found here
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Choosing a distro for a technophobe's computerEnglish
0·7 months agoIf you(they) don’t mind having outdated software Debian stable might be worth looking into. Otherwise there are immutable distros which are very hard to fuck up, and even if you do there is the option to rollback to the previous version. I’d recommend Aurora or Fedora (fedora doesn’t include some proprietary stuff like some codecs so if you need that it’s probably better to use Aurora).
Linux Mint also has a version based on Debian stable, LMDE, which is could also be an option. It’s not as stable as Debian as it adds its own stuff but has the out of the box experience.
As general advice I’d suggest using less packages and more flatpaks as a faulty flatpak update can only break that flatpak, not your system. For packages be sure to disable online updates, meaning you have to reboot to apply them. This isn’t as convenient but if stability is that important to you I’d go for it
Where/how would one find this video? Just so I can avoid it
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•WinBoat is a new Linux app to run Windows apps with "seamless integration"English
0·7 months agoAs far as I’m aware Photopea is supposed to fill the same niche as GIMP or Photoshop, though I’m no expert in the field.
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•WinBoat is a new Linux app to run Windows apps with "seamless integration"English
0·7 months agoHave you tried Photopea? It’s browser based but very good
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•WinBoat is a new Linux app to run Windows apps with "seamless integration"English
0·7 months agoFrom their FAQ
With WinApps you do the bulk of the setup manually, and there’s no cohesive interface to bring it all together. There’s a basic TUI, a taskbar widget, and some CLI commands for you to play with.
WinBoat does all the setup once you have the pre-requisites installed, displays everything worth seeing in a neat interface for you, and acts like a complete experience. No need to mess with configuration files, no need to memorize a dozen CLI commands, it just works.
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•WinBoat is a new Linux app to run Windows apps with "seamless integration"English
0·7 months agoWe have Wine / Proton of course and they can run a lot, but not everything is possible. WinBoat is different. Instead of running compatibility layers, it runs a real copy of Windows using Docker and KVM under the hood. The developer explains it should run basically everything unless “it requires strong GPU acceleration or kernel-level anticheat”. It uses FreeRDP for showing the apps on your Linux desktop, enabling you to interact with them like you would with any other Linux app.
I don’t want to sound rude, but maybe read the article and not just the headline before asking questions
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•WinBoat is a new Linux app to run Windows apps with "seamless integration"English
0·7 months agoFrom their FAQ
With WinApps you do the bulk of the setup manually, and there’s no cohesive interface to bring it all together. There’s a basic TUI, a taskbar widget, and some CLI commands for you to play with.
WinBoat does all the setup once you have the pre-requisites installed, displays everything worth seeing in a neat interface for you, and acts like a complete experience. No need to mess with configuration files, no need to memorize a dozen CLI commands, it just works.
RmDebArc_5@piefed.zipto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•ublock lite is now on IOS, Should people switch to that instead of using Adguard or should they stick with Adguard?English
0·7 months agoIf you want DNS filters you can use Mullvad DNS which is free, privat, doesn’t require a app and can be used together with uBlock lite
The only Desktop one that comes to mind is Interstellar, but you could probably also use a web fronted that is instance independent like phtn.app (Which I would recommend if it works)



They have their own repos:
https://www.cromite.org/fdroid/repo
https://fdroid.ironfoxoss.org/fdroid/repo