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ashaman2007@lemm.eeto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Looks like Comaps now has an apk that can be downloaded7·5 days agoFor those out of the loop: https://news.itsfoss.com/organic-maps-fork-comaps/
ashaman2007@lemm.eeto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Looks like Comaps now has an apk that can be downloaded3·5 days agoWow this is big news, Comaps is the fork of Organic Maps: https://news.itsfoss.com/organic-maps-fork-comaps/
Let’s be careful to remember that there are different levels of effort and understanding required for different levels of security and privacy. GrapheneOS has taken the approach of offering harm reduction, with sane defaults and options that allow advanced users to take near-complete control over their device (within the limits of the Pixel hardware). This is obvious by their inclusion of the sandboxed Google Play Store as a major feature of the OS, as it is much better than the situation on Google’s Android. It is also not installed by default, forcing users to at least somewhat educate themselves in order to install it.
Accrescent is right in line with this philosophy, and is also not installed by default. Of course if your threat model (or desire) is to achieve the highest level of online anonymity and to have a completely FOSS system, you should not use it… of course you probably shouldn’t use FDroid either, in that case, and should build from source. However, you are clearly in a situation where your threat model does not require those lengths, and FDroid is more of a principled choice.
I think its pointlessly inflammatory to call Accrescent “dangerous” just because it allows for non-FOSS software. Now if you want to criticize whether or not it is fulfilling its stated goals, that is another story.
ashaman2007@lemm.eeto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Good experience with neko remote browserEnglish7·8 days agoNo, he had access but clearly the router admin interface wasn’t set up to allow remote access. He then needed to access the router from a browser inside the LAN, and he did have the proxmox host configured correctly to access remotely.
Yeah knocking them over while active would probably not be the best, you can even hear the stress on the spindle bearings if you rotate a running hard drive. However you should be free to mount them (securely) in almost any orientation given the discussion in this old post: https://www.silentpcreview.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=21533&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0
ashaman2007@lemm.eetoUnixporn@lemmy.ml•[Hyprland] Got bored, decided to try a different WM3·21 days agoCIA surveillance birds 😱
ashaman2007@lemm.eeto Linux@lemmy.ml•Which X11 software keeps you from switching to Wayland?0·1 month agohttps://github.com/jersou/mouse-actions
It’s recommended by the easystroke dev too: https://github.com/thjaeger/easystroke/wiki
Depends on what your definition of winning is. If we reach a state where it is literally impossible to run your own software without heavy hardware modification, which would exclude 99.9% of users, that would be like big tech winning in my book. That’s why right to repair is important, and we probably also need laws to prevent OEMs from disallowing the use of alternate OS.