Dude, I can’t wait to have IPv6 everywhere and have our own IP addresses for everyone.
Dude, I can’t wait to have IPv6 everywhere and have our own IP addresses for everyone.
Can users self host that and set up clients to use their own servers?
Ok, now I understand what OP meant.
However, I use my own SearxNG instance, so I guess I never thought about it that way.
But we already have decentralized encypted chat, it’s XMPP.
Is yours truly P2P? What about clients behind NAT? Does it use STUN/TURN servers?
Dumb question, why do you need VPN to use SearxNG?
For the longest time people wondered: how do bees fly and don’t bump into each other? There are so many of them!
To find out, people used high speed cameras, and then they were shocked by the fact that bees actually do bump into each other.
Isn’t it ridiculous that we just take our assumptions on something we have no idea about as facts?
You don’t need to have ipv6 support by your provider, it’s ipv6 over ipv4. You only need your hardware (phones, laptops) and software (OS, servers, clients) to support ipv6.
I use it to play LAN games with my friend from other country, kind of like Hamachi, but FOSS.
It just works. You install yggdrasil on all your devices that support ipv6, you write down ipv6 of all devices you want to connect to, you type the ygg ipv6 and connect, as long as ports are open.
Netsukuku… Now that is something I haven’t heard about in ages.
DimStar sounds familiar… But I can’t remember where I could hear about him.
Yeah, I just downloaded a few communities from AUR, they run really well under Plasma 6.
Have you never tried to download a community?
I use Quassel hosted on my server.
I wish I could switch to Inkscape, but it’s not there yet.
It is really good lately and only getting better, but there are 2 major issues I have with Inkscape.
Tabs (as in, tabulation, the \t character) in text objects. You can find workarounds, like splitting your text into multiple objects and aligning them on your canvas, but it’s just not as good as being able to align your text using proper text alignment tools. Tabulation doesn’t work in Inkscape because it’s not in SVG spec, AFAIK.
Object styles. Again, there are workarounds, but they’re not as good. Can you create a text style called “numbering”, use it to number a lot of stuff in your document, then just change font family (or make it italic, or bold) all of the numbers at once by changing the “numbering” style? I don’t think it’s currently possible. Sure, inkscape is not a word processor. But can you make an object of style “banner” with a blue gradient fill, orange 2 px stroke and 50% transparency, use it multiple times, then when you need to change from blue gradient to red gradient just change the “banner” style? Again, there are ways to achieve this, but if you do this kind of stuff, inkscape is just not ready to replace your tools.
Don’t get me wrong, I really want to switch to FOSS all the way and wait for these things to get implemented. As soon as they’re there, I’ll be the first to make the switch. But it’s not now, unfortunately.
If I’m wrong, I’ll be happy to stand corrected.
Arch never broke for me.
Unless you seek trouble and do stuff without knowing what you are doing (like blindly copy pasting commands from internet into your terminal), it generally just works.
It’s not as good as those distros where all packages come preconfigured for you to work nicely together, so if you want to build a custom system (like, choose your DE/WM/panels/widgets etc), you have to configure all of that to intergate nicely. But you could always just install KDE and everything is pretty stable there, same as in any other KDE based distro.
Is it trying to solve any problem that is not solved by rsync/rclone?
Don’t get me wrong, I love new tools, just curious how is it different (better or worse) from rsync?
So I guess it’s something like pressing ctrl+c: most software doesn’t specifically handle this hotkey so in general it will interrupt a running process, but software can choose to handle it differently (like in vim ctrl+C does not interrupt it).
Thanks.
Fun fact: pressing X (close button) on a window does not make it that your app is closed, it just sends a signal that you wish to close it, your app can choose what to do with this signal.
How do symlinks work from the point of view of software?
Imagine I have a file in my downloads folder called movie.mp4, and I have a symlink to it in my home folder.
Whenever I open the symlink, does the software (player) understand «oh this file seems like a symlink, I should go and open the original file», or it’s a filesystem level stuff and software (player) basically has no idea if a file I’m opening is a symlink or the original movie.mp4?
Can I use sync software (like Dropbox, Gdrive or whatever) to sync symlinks? Can I use sync software to sync actual files, but only have symlinks in my sync folder?
Is there a rule of thumb to predict how software behaves when dealing with symlinks?
I just don’t grok symbolic links.
Eh, I wish it wasn’t docker only.
I want to apt install stuff or at least download and run a binary, but not docker.