Additionally, at least for my use-case btrfs benefits me since it is less picky about drive sizes being the same and duplicating everything correctly - letting you essentially just throw additional storage at it as you acquire it.
Additionally, at least for my use-case btrfs benefits me since it is less picky about drive sizes being the same and duplicating everything correctly - letting you essentially just throw additional storage at it as you acquire it.
Not all notifications go through FCM but all push notifications do as far as I’m aware - which is what the previous comment and the post title are talking about.
It is, in fact, worrying for privacy implications on the one hand and a real monopolizing factor on the other since if you wish to deliver an app which needs to implement such notifications you’re using Google’s service or constantly drain the user’s battery.
There’s UnifiedPush which tries to provide an open alternative but so far unfortunately still sees very little adoption.
Thanks for the hint but I am not entirely sure which icon you are referring to unfortunately.
Is it an icon provided by the application? Otherwise, this is an Android phone (LineageOS to be specific) and I am not sure there would be an Apple sharing icon on it.
As @const_void@lemmy.ml points out, there’s a bunch of players that can scrobble directly to listenbrainz.
But even if you use some player that does not have support for it, you can make any player that can scrobble to last.fm work with listenbrainz instead since they provide a compatible API. This includes even software which officially only supports last.fm by simply changing the scrobble destination it wants to scrobble to in your hosts file.
It really is pretty nice software.
Codeberg the community is very nice with strong focus on the right to privacy and free software, which I feel reflects itself especially in a lot of copylefted projects on the service.
Codeberg the collaboration platform is in my epxerience by the simple fact of critical mass quite a bit less ‘collaborative’ for many projects. There’s a couple projects with tight communities, and a lot of single dev projects with maybe a drive-by PR.
Codeberg the software runs on Gitea (/Forgejo) which is wonderful software - slim, simple enough to get everything done without being in the way.
There’s efforts to open up the gitea/forgejo forges to federation, which would be a very neat way to fix the collaboration issue and is - in my view - the way forward for open, decentralized collaborative software creation. It’s still quite a ways off (especially from bring mature enough to be used day-to-day) but when it gets there platforms like codeberg will be the first to adopt it and to also benefit massively from it.
The rss feed should be accessible here but it’s unfortunately a little buggy, been meaning to spruce it up for ages.
xdg-open
is very nifty, especially due to its ubiquitousness on a variety of distributions.
You can even have a look inside to see that it is actually a shell script yet again invoking other ‘opening’ scripts in the background!
I wrote a little bit about it and an alternative to it called mimeo
not too long ago.
That one can even open things by advanced filters such as regexes. So you could e.g. open https://eff.org
in Firefox and http://localhost:3000
in a different application or other advanced shenanigans - though I’ve never used such advanced features much.
While I do not doubt this happening, nor it being sexist at its core, I find no mention of it on the linked wikipedia article.
EDIT: Ah, it actually links to a now-defunct british spacecentre article in the original TIL with the following quote:
and there’s an '82 NYT article mentioning it here