Oh man, not case sensitive, NOOOOOO!!N
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I’m busted I guess. Beep boop.
Well that was the quickest random result I had while searching on mobile. Just to pave the way at least :)
That image seems to be on stock image sites like this one. So it’s just an image. Didn’t see any version that is converted to an actual theme.
Well, those windows reminded me of this old VLC skin.
And no, not a bot. Just a random internet user.
said@lemmy.sdf.orgto PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Why the Steam Deck still obliterates the Switch 2 (a response to Nintendo Life)English10·6 months agoSwitch 2 can’t play decades of PC games, all which are accessible on Switch.
I think you meant “which are accessible on Steam Deck”
Other people already mentioned Roundcube and Snappymail, which are good options already.
There’s also Cypht if you want a different approach. It combines multiple accounts into same interface so you can have a unified inbox.
said@lemmy.sdf.orgto Emulation@lemmy.ml•Are there any guides of how to play PlayStation games on Lemuroid?1·6 months agoI don’t remember finding a guide for it but when I saw the bios menu in the settings, I went “use the source, Luke” way and searched in Lemuroid repo for bios detection.
Here is where it shows the bios files and corresponding systems that you can have and use. You simply drop those files to the same directory as roms. After a scan, you can check and see that bios files you copied are detected. Then it should work with any roms you have in hand for those systems.
Edit: Also I thought I should mention this part as well, copied from Lemuroid help:
*Why aren’t my games detected? If your games are compressed, try try putting ROMs into separate directories, one for each system with the following names: nes, snes, md, gb, gbe, gba, n64, sms, psp, nds, gg, atari2600, psx, fbneo, mame2003plus, pce, lynx, atari7800, scd, ngp, ngc, ws, wse, dos, 3ds.
I guess this is a guide now :)
Well if you happen to find a good app that does what you want on desktop, then you can complement it on Android with Markor , it’s “markdown native” and it has nice extra options like adding list elements, quick formatting etc. All based on markdown, can be easily switched between editor mode and preview(markdown rendered) mode.
Of course Github is just an example but you can pretty much regex any URL and further filter out anything in order to get the apk link with it. So depending on your level of privacy requirement and trusted sources, you can skip all the centralized ones and build your own list of sources.
Not exactly answering your question but you can use the app Obtainium to fetch the apk URL from a website/github repo and many other sources to install directly. It also supports fdroid repos and many other sources out of the box. Kinda half way what you mentioned in your first paragraph.
said@lemmy.sdf.orgto Privacy@lemmy.ml•How do you find the compromise between privacy and daily phone usage?9·9 months agoIn addition to the answer #4, you can use Geo Share to automatically convert google maps links then open in OsmAnd for example.
said@lemmy.sdf.orgto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•XPipe - A connection hub for all your servers: Status update for the v14 releaseEnglish1·9 months agoGreat then, thank you for the explanation.
said@lemmy.sdf.orgto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•XPipe - A connection hub for all your servers: Status update for the v14 releaseEnglish2·9 months agoSpeaking of the enterprise and free features, what does the open core only version provide when compared to the binary releases? Can the core component that has the source code release be used as is alone?
said@lemmy.sdf.orgto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•XPipe - A connection hub for all your servers: Status update for the v14 releaseEnglish3·9 months agoYeah I saw that option to offer free upgrade for the claimed personal use and that’s nice. It’s also just fine for paying such a product as a whole. I was just frustrated for not being able to try it with a single server.
Reason for Oracle Linux is my Linux journey pretty much started and continued with rhel based distros, be it Mandrake(yeap good old Mandrake) at home at first then actual redhat subscription in the research center I volunteered and mostly centos on my servers as well as fedora as my workstation OS.
After Centos upstream change, I started using Oracle and it’s nice and stable. As far as the explanation on the product page goes I guess anything that looks like rhel (like Rocky) will also ring the enterprise bells.
Thankfully most hobbyists like raspi users will go with Debian based stock OS or use something like Ubuntu server version so they’ll be fine with free version of xpipe.
said@lemmy.sdf.orgto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•XPipe - A connection hub for all your servers: Status update for the v14 releaseEnglish4·9 months agoThank you for the heads up, i was a dork, it’s indeed fully listed in the table that’s on the pricing page. I’ll quote that part for the context. From the Pricing page :
The following systems are classified as commercial operating systems within XPipe and connections to those systems are only possible starting from the homelab plan:
Amazon Linux systems
Oracle Linux systems
The following systems are classified as enterprise operating systems within XPipe and connections to those systems are only possible starting from the professional plan:
Red Hat Enterprise Linux systems
SUSE Enterprise Linux systems
Zentyal systems
Windows Enterprise systems
Windows Azure systems
said@lemmy.sdf.orgto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•XPipe - A connection hub for all your servers: Status update for the v14 releaseEnglish11·9 months agoSeemed so nice until I tried to add my very first personal server that has Oracle Linux distro on it and it paywalled me immediately. So if you want it for personal use but you use the wrong(!) distro on your server, tough luck! You gotta pay for it unless you replace your server with something like Debian I guess. That was the end of it for me. As a constructive feedback: it would be nice to see a list of which distro/server os variants are not paywalled, or which ones are paywalled. For now Asbru will do it for me.
Edit: turns out it’s written out on the pricing page in detail. See the comment below.
It’s a nice post but I agree with IRC still being in use just like those decades ago. It’s just that it’s not the only viable medium for many.
About finding all of those you mentioned, you can probably go select one of that huge list of networks on https://kiwiirc.com/nextclient/ by clicking add network and start talking as a guest.
(1)You can just select one of the big networks, they are on top before the second seperator. (2)Don’t need to install a client, (3)no extra configuration needed, already configured, (4)no need for account creating for most of the channels, just call /list command for the channels and select one with good amount of users. It’ll probably be active to some degree when compared to some obscure ssh chat demo.
There are many open source projects that has their main chat rooms on IRC networks, self hosted or public ones.
And if you want to relive the actual nostalgia of chatting on IRC, one can go install one of the classic IRC clients and go thought all of those steps to join some nice communities.