Lollypop, it’s a bit dated in terms of design for a GNOME app but it has all the features you could want. Can’t comment on playlists though, I have never used playlists and honestly don’t get the point of them.
Lollypop, it’s a bit dated in terms of design for a GNOME app but it has all the features you could want. Can’t comment on playlists though, I have never used playlists and honestly don’t get the point of them.
Zoxide, lets you quickly jump to places in your filesystem. E.g. z pic
will put you in ~/Pictures
.
Lemmy’s upvotes are same thing as likes, and downvotes are dislikes. This is kinda hard to tell because Mastodon doesn’t federate likes, so Lemmy posts will always show up as having no favourites.
No, the devs have explicitly stated they don’t want to add following users to Lemmy.
Damn, what are the odds?
Chrome, and browsers based on it, currently account for more than three quarters of web traffic. This gives Google a huge amount of power over the web and how people are able to interact with it. Google is also a company who’s primary business is advertising and surveillance; this means they have every incentive to curtail your ability to stop websites from spying on you and force you to use the web on their terms. They’re currently exercising this power with the rollout of Manifest V3, where they’re severely limiting the functionality of content blocking extensions like uBlock Origin.
Checking if the user is using Firefox is pretty easy:
CSS.supports('(-moz-user-input: none)') // only returns true in FF
GTK currently has a CSS extension that lets you define named colours with @define-color
.
Interesting project, I hope it takes off. Definitely a problem I’ve run into.
website may be grammatically incorrect
I only noticed three small mistakes.
Communities in Lemmy are only federated if a user is subscribes to them from external instance.
This should be ‘subscribed’ and ‘an external instance’.
I think mods (including me) wouldn’t to put effort into a new community
Should be ‘wouldn’t want to’.
Tablet, for whatever reason it gives blobby output like this:
It’s main advantage, as far as I can tell, is having a much simpler interface. It’s snapping tools are trivial to use and discover, but far less robust than Krita’s assistant tool. It’s easier to add brushes, but you have far less options in configuring them. I don’t thinks there’s anything that Firealpaca can do that’s partially hard to do in Krita. Also, Firealpaca doesn’t have a dark mode.
I’m not an experienced artist though, so take my opinion with a grain of salt.
Its brush engine is kinda bad though. You basically have to turn on “Zero pressure at both ends” and put the stabiliser up to like 15 to get anything usable. Not sure I can recommend it.
devs are begging
Do you mean beginning?
Thank god for reader view because this makes me feel physically sick to look at.
I’m glad they decided to not ship beta-quality software to users, even if it makes for an unexciting release. I like Fedora because it’s (mostly) stable.
That video showing the hibernation of a GUI app was so cool and might just be Wayland’s first killer feature.
That’s because the link is measuring the length of the info docs, not the man pages.
I don’t believe this is mine or Mat’s first time making it onto this (I also only changed a number, hardly work).