Dockge looks interesting, I gotta check that out
Dockge looks interesting, I gotta check that out
The thing that I find the most funny about this post, is the fact that you call this Italian
Is your browser installed as a Flatpak?
Kodi is ideal for an HTPC
I don’t really remember, that was a few years ago. I’ve been using the flatpak ever since.
For me it was actually the other way around, I had issues with the normal package so I went with the flatpak.
IMO the best Linux desktop experience that you can get right now
@remindme@mstdn.social 1 week
True, just wanted to mention that they make other great stuff. You can basically game on every Linux distro, it doesn’t have to be gaming-focused.
Or Universal Blue in general. They also make Aurora and Bluefin, both are amazing!
It’s great for documents, etc., but I would use something different for photos. Check out Immich and PhotoPrism. I prefer Immich, because it has official mobile apps for Android and iOS. PhotoPrism has an unofficial gallery app for Android, but it doesn’t have sync capabilities. For that, you would need to use a 3rd-party, closed source app called PhotoSync. I think Immich is just the better option.
NextDNS is very easy to use, you can check out this video: https://youtu.be/WUG57ynLb8I
You can try uninstalling as much Google crap as possible using the Universal Android Debloater
Then perhaps use a firewall like NetGuard in whitelist mode, to only allow selected apps to access the internet
As an additional layer of security, you can use NextDNS with the No Google blocklist, and block all connections to Google servers in DNS. If you need to access specific things like YouTube, you can whitelist them.
Discover doesn’t actually download stuff, it’s just a frontend for a package manager like apt, pacman, Flatpak or Snap. The package manager would need to support a speed limit feature.
True, didn’t say that it didn’t take me an eternity to set it up
You mean Bazzite? Yeah, it’s really great. Based on uBlue, which is actually based on Fedora’s Atomic spins. It’s very stable, secure and reliable, and pretty hard to mess up. Basically the closest thing to SteamOS that you can get.
uBlue Bazzite is pretty cool, Fedora/Nobara, Pop!_OS, Mint, etc. mostly just work, Gauda is arch-based, is optimized for gaming and performance and is pretty user friendly.
OpenBoard isn’t updated anymore, use HeliBoard instead (it’s a fork that’s actively maintained). It’s also on F-Droid https://f-droid.org/en/packages/helium314.keyboard/