itsfoss.com

OddFed, to linux in 5 Most Privacy Focused Web Browsers
@OddFed@feddit.de avatar
Engywuck, (edited )

Don’t care. I’ll keep using it. By the way, Mozilla aren’t the saints you may think they are:

old.reddit.com/…/can_someone_explain_why_mozillas…

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitchell_Baker#Negative_sal…

techrights.org/o/2022/02/17/mozilla-salaries/

news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28116853

calpaterson.com/mozilla.html

I’d rather stop to use the web altogether before giving scummy Mozilla any market share again.

lemmy_user_838586,

deleted_by_author

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  • Engywuck,

    No, the links about Mozilla show how corrupt their directives are. Peole are so eager to scrutiny competing browsers/company and their forgive every shit Mozilla or their board do.

    By the way, who cares about Brave’s CEO? I don’t agree with his political views, but for me their browser it’s the best out there at the moment and the company itself isn’t politically active at all.

    Did you ask any other Mozilla employee what their political views are, by the way? How can you be sure that all of them are “good persons”? Do you buy your stuff on Amazon, by any chance, knowing how evil thy are? Are you sure that your grocery store’s owner/your mechanic/your doctor/etc. isn’t an homophobe or a bad person? Please, be coherent and go and ask all the people you make deals with what their political views are.

    lemmy_user_838586,

    deleted_by_author

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  • Engywuck,

    I’m not upset. I may have been unclear. I just find funny that people in the (F)OSS/Linux community (which I’m clearly part of) are very prone to scrutinize Brave and other companies, while they pretend not to see what’s going on at Mozilla, which seems to always get a free pass.

    lemmy_user_838586,

    deleted_by_author

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  • Engywuck,

    That’s fine. I was just replying to your comment. Have a nice day.

    smotherlove,

    Lot of talk about Mozilla, but what about Firefox? I’m not using the CEO as my web browser.

    Engywuck,

    I used to like Firefox (been using is since 2002ish…). But after a lot feature removals and, last but not least, the ugly UI redesign (despite the negative feedback in the nightly/beta phase) I just jumped ship. I’m not going to waste my time fixing it with CSSs, unfucking what Mozilla did wrong. Anyway, Brave is just faster, it performs better and has a no-shit UI.

    This, plus the disappointment I’ve had with Mozilla, gives me exactly 0 reason to go back.

    DangerousInternet, (edited )
    @DangerousInternet@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_author

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  • Engywuck,

    Mozilla itself has provento be nothing but a cash grab, at this point. And people keep falling for it (less and less people over time, fortunately).

    x3i, (edited ) to linux in Enabling Bluetooth on Arch Linux

    This is one of the reasons why I am very unsure about the whole archinstall thing. On the one hand, it lowers the barrier of entry for less techy people, which is always good. On the other hand, it allows for installing the OS without ever having to use the archwiki, which leads to people making a blog post like this that could be solved by looking for “bluetooth” in the archwiki and following the instructions. To somebody not familiar with the OS, this makes it seem like arch is much more complicated than it actually is. “To run arch, you have to hope that there is a blog post or youtube video for simple things like bluetooth!”

    No, you simply go here: wiki.archlinux.org(Also very useful resource if you are on any other distro btw)

    luthis,

    There is an archinstall script??

    noodlejetski,
    Synthead,

    To run arch, you have to hope that there is a blog post or youtube video for simple things like bluetooth!

    Or know what systemd is

    luthis,

    Systemd is amazing. Every user should at least know the basics.

    lemmyvore,

    What on Earth for. I don’t think I’ve used it more than a couple of times over the last 5 years, and that was for arcane stuff like enabling rc.local (which is something every user should probably not know about…)

    sederx, (edited )

    scheduling processes, enabling services, debug services and a shit load of other things that advanced users need.

    luthis,

    Plex, CUPS (printing services), Minecraft servers, VPN, file sharing, DHCP/DNS/Wifi, bluetooth are some examples of basic level things systemd can help regular users manage.

    Systemd goes far beyond that too.

    BudgieMania, to linux in Bored With Bash? Change the Default Shell in Linux

    Bored with driving your car with a wheel and pedals? Change the default handling device in your vehicle

    callyral, to linux in Bored With Bash? Change the Default Shell in Linux
    @callyral@pawb.social avatar

    i use nushell

    amanneedsamaid, to linux in 7 Ways to Tweak Sudo Command in Linux

    Step 1. install opendoas

    Herbstzeitlose, to linux in 5 Most Privacy Focused Web Browsers

    Please stop the blogspam. Nobody wants to see yet another shitty list.

    efscher, to linux in 5 Most Privacy Focused Web Browsers
    @efscher@lemmy.nyc.what.if.ua avatar

    Orion doesn’t make the list?

    Synthead, to linux in Enabling Bluetooth on Arch Linux

    A whole article for starting bluetooth from systemctl?

    moreeni,

    itsfoss.com is awful

    lemmyvore,

    Why doesn’t it start automatically anyway?

    Synthead,

    It’s against the philosophy of Arch. You configure your system the way you want.

    lemmyvore,

    So, like, you have to manually enable every service you install?

    Synthead, (edited )

    Yes, always.

    • Maybe you want to migrate a PostgreSQL database to a newer version without starting PostgreSQL server.
    • Maybe you installed OpenSSH but don’t want sshd to run yet, because you haven’t hardened the configs.
    • Maybe you installed Nginx as a part of a migration from Apache httpd, but httpd is already running.

    In addition, Arch hardly configures your system in a custom way, too. When you install a package, most of the time, it responds with “here are the files from the developer that you asked for.”

    If you don’t like this philosophy, then your feelings are perfectly valid, and this is a textbook example of why different distributions exist 👍

    sederx,

    Why would it?

    lemmyvore,

    Because if I install bluetooth it’s because I have some bluetooth devices I want to use?..

    sederx,

    Not necessarily at all times.

    pastermil, to linux in Enabling Bluetooth on Arch Linux

    Meanwhile, Linux Mint users have it on by default.

    Jumuta,

    mint and arch aren’t made for the same people. Not everyone wants it on by default

    lemmyvore, (edited )

    Out of curiosity, what’s the point of installing Bluetooth but keeping it disabled?

    I imagine the opposite would be the default most people wanted (enable it by default and let power users with a bizarre use case disable it manually).

    sederx,

    Because it’s a security risk but you might need it sometimes.

    Jumuta,

    because arch is a minimal distro and some people see the processing power used for bt to be wasted

    Darken, to linux in Enabling Bluetooth on Arch Linux
    @Darken@reddthat.com avatar

    deleted_by_author

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  • sederx,

    Lol seriously what is this. You need to start your own services in arch everybody who used it knows that

    madmaurice, (edited ) to linux in Enabling Bluetooth on Arch Linux
    @madmaurice@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    author: has Master’s degree in engineering

    also author: “Let’s write a blog post about how to enable a systemd service”

    ReakDuck,

    Maybe he was Windows user and only got to know the depth of how to create a Object Oriented Class efficiently or smth.

    But basic stufd like, using the terminal or smth, nah.

    vzq, to linux in 6 LibreOffice Alternatives for Linux

    If we are doing online and non free, just use office365 or Google docs. At least your project mates won’t hate you.

    kingmongoose7877,
    @kingmongoose7877@lemmy.ml avatar

    No…they hate you regardless.

    bbbhltz, to linux in 6 LibreOffice Alternatives for Linux
    @bbbhltz@beehaw.org avatar

    Here is the list with my opinions:

    1. ONLYOFFICE (I might need to give it a try again some day)
    2. OpenOffice (should probably stop including it in repos)
    3. CryptPad (more of a Google Docs alternative)
    4. SoftMaker FreeOffice (never heard of it)
    5. WPS Office (nah, thanks)
    6. Calligra (looks good on KDE)
    ares35,
    @ares35@kbin.social avatar

    onlyoffice is what i use, on linux and windows.

    i think that the libreoffice people should have re-joined openoffice once their main gripe (oracle) was out of the picture, which wasn't long after they split-off and released their first forked version.

    LeFantome,

    The only benefit that OpenOffice had was the name. Given the momentum that LibreOffice had early on, OpenOffice should clearly have joined with them and maybe ceded the name.

    I am glad that LibreOffice did not try to merge back with OpenOffice as clearly it remains a poorly managed project. The continued existence of OpenOffice is doing tremendous damage to the wider ecosystem. The fact that Apache continues to promote the project not only reflects badly in them but show what poor stewards they are. I would not have wanted their lead ship to have hampered the subsequent success of LibreOffice. The whole episode just proves that LibreOffice was right to break away and not just because of Oracle.

    ares35,
    @ares35@kbin.social avatar

    a combined openoffice project would be different than what it or libreoffice is today.

    30p87, to linux in 6 LibreOffice Alternatives for Linux

    nvim + LaTeX extension

    _cnt0,
    Snowcap7567,

    And sc-im for spreadsheets

    WheelcharArtist, to linux in 6 LibreOffice Alternatives for Linux

    open office? really??

    sv1sjp,
    @sv1sjp@lemmy.world avatar

    Time Traveling is a thing as we can see

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