Mastodon: @Andromxda@infosec.exchange
wiki-user: Andromxda
There’s also a more feature-rich version of the app called SCEE, as well as Every Door and Vespucci.
You can also follow all of them, as well as OpenStreetMap itself on Mastodon:
@openstreetmap@en.osm.town
@everydoor@en.osm.town
@streetcomplete@mastodon.social
You can use Every Door
Make sure to also run NeoStumbler in the background, so you can scan for Wi-Fi networks, cell towers, as well as BLE beacons, and contribute this data to BeaconDB (!beacondb@lemmy.dbzer0.com) (no, I’m not affiliated with the project, I just support their mission)
You can also find NeoStumbler on Accrescent (Mastodon)
I like HeyForm. Here’s the source code, as well as instructions for self-hosting. It looks very clean and modern, and has a similar UX to Typeform.
The second best option would be Nextcloud Forms (source code).
@oranki@lemmy.world’s hydroxide-push is very useful if you want to get Proton Mail notifications via ntfy, so you don’t have to use Google Play Services/Firebase Cloud Messaging on degoogled Android systems like GrapheneOS
Also check out the post in !unifiedpush@lemmy.dbzer0.com about it: https://lemmy.world/post/17087912
PipePipe has been around for quite some time, at least 2 years I believe
I was searching for any native(non-proxied) YouTube client for Android in kotlin.
You can always turn off the proxying in LibreTube
A good portion of Android itself is written in Java, and is not expected to get ported to Kotlin any time soon
Not using the Piped or Invidious API to proxy the video stream, since these tend to get blocked by YouTube really quickly
Basically everyone in the community agrees that Mint, Ubuntu and Fedora are the best choices for new users. Mint and Ubuntu are pretty similar, so they don’t require separate maintenance effort, and supporting Fedora is not that hard, if you already support RHEL, CentOS or another rpm-based distro (which are pretty common in the enterprise space). For all the desktop applications, Flatpak exists and is agreed on as the standard format by most of the desktop Linux community.
Of course not. They wouldn’t have had any reason to switch.
Of course they would? Millions of euros of tax revenue sounds like a pretty compelling reason to me. This is why Micro$oft’s “lobby efforts” should be labeled as what they are: Nothing more and nothing less than corruption.
It takes more maintenance than Windows.
If you create your own distro, yes. But there are countless noob-friendly distros like Mint, Ubuntu and Fedora that they could use with practically 0 maintenance required. Also, compare the 2004 desktop Linux experience to now. Having used Gentoo Linux compiled from a stage 1 tarball back in 2002, I can tell you: the differences are tremendous. Many of the issues they had can be directly attributed to OpenOffice and it’s bad compatibility with Microsoft Office file formats, which has long been replaced by LibreOffice. It still worked out pretty well for them, over a period of 13 years. And it saved the tax payer millions of euros of Microsoft’s stupid licensing fee for their proprietary garbage.
From memory, Germany did this many years ago, and ended up rolling it back?
The city of Munich deployed their own custom Linux systems many years ago. But since it wasn’t really maintained and updated, the user experience was pretty bad and the city’s employees were unhappy. Then Micro$oft lobbyists also came in and made them switch - by threatening to move their German headquarters out of Munich, which would cost the city lots of tax revenue.
Most of the Windows malware gets deployed by some user downloading and executing random files they downloaded on the web. Since installing applications on Linux is usually done through some centralized package manager or app store (Flathub), it almost entirely eliminates this attack vector. Running random scripts from the internet by downloading them using curl
and piping them into sudo bash
is a whole nother issue though. Noob-friendly distros like Ubuntu should IMO have some safeguards in place to block these actions.
Except they couldn’t keep the Micro$oft criminals lobbyists out
“It sounds like a password”
I like Zola. You can integrate it with Lemmy comments: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/30018034