And don’t forget that Google is pushing to restrict Android just like iOS where if you unlock the bootloader and root, SafetyNet fails and apps stop working, while in windows having admin accounts is normal.
And don’t forget that Google is pushing to restrict Android just like iOS where if you unlock the bootloader and root, SafetyNet fails and apps stop working, while in windows having admin accounts is normal.
If you already use Piped and have Android then you can use LibreTube, a client for Piped
Yes, I like RSS for tech news but I still prefer to read a discussion on it.
Never heard of that one before but will definitely try. Thanks
Yes, still get my share of spam, especially on politics, but other than that it works ok.
Unpopular opinion but I switched from RSS to Google News and Reddit / Lemmy for basically 2 things:
I like the Google algorithm for news (guess that’s why it’s called that) it shows relevant news, especially local. When I subscribed to local news papers’ RSS, for example, they pump a lot of articles and the relevant news were difficult to spot. It still lags behind on tech news for instance.
I switched to Reddit because of the community content: conversations. On RSS you get all the news and all that but it lacks the social aspect, people discussing an article, learning from others. This is why I’m still here.
Why? It’s easy to use, there’s no ads, has many features, etc.
Is it only because it’s owned by a big corp?
I’m still having this issue when sorting comments by Top :(
I’ll check that one out.
Is Floris Board still maintained? Latest stable release was in June 2022 and latest beta in September 2022.
Their GitHub says that stable versions are released “1 release per 1-5 months” and beta “up to 1-2 releases per week”.
Money
To answer your question, you’re missing Infinity for Lemmy, Arctius, Beyond for Lemmy and Slide.
Check the Lemmy apps megathread: https://lemmy.world/post/465785
New version fixed it!
Is it working fine for everyone? For me it crashes after I sign in and opening the app after being closed.
So I read many times that it can store “several TBs of data” but how many exactly? 2, 3, 5, 10?
Do they know exactly? Is it possible that they write 5 TBs and when they try to read it, they can only read like 3, losing the other 2 TBs?