You said you used river, so I’ve checked their wiki https://github.com/riverwm/river/wiki/Recommended-Software#output-configuration
Maybe you can add your tool there as well.
You said you used river, so I’ve checked their wiki https://github.com/riverwm/river/wiki/Recommended-Software#output-configuration
Maybe you can add your tool there as well.
Looks similar to https://git.sr.ht/~leon_plickat/wlopm/
It would be best to try every single one separately, otherwise you’ll have dozens of programs that do the exact same thing, like file explorers.
That said, with Fedora you can list available desktop environments using the default package manager, dnf. In a terminal use the dnf group list command to list all available desktop environments:
dnf group list --available *desktop
Install the required desktop environment using the dnf install command. Ensure to prefix with the @ sign, for example:
dnf install @kde-desktop-environment
After trying the DE, you can remove it with:
dnf remove @kde-desktop-environment
I had success with iodine, it’s slow but it worked.
https://www.8x8.com/terms-and-conditions/privacy-policy
It doesn’t seem the ToS supports your claim. Can you provide a link?
Seems they may ask to use the meeting data if you record or livestream, but not otherwise. So not equally bad.
What’s the difference?
Maybe Podman, then? There are many other alternatives.
If you don’t want CloudFlare, it’s also possible to spin your own tunnel over DNS with iodine.
Works with CUDA and RDPing on a 2x2 monitor grid?