Well done. UX is where most FOSS app let users down. Hope you can improve the UX still keeping it simple.
Well done. UX is where most FOSS app let users down. Hope you can improve the UX still keeping it simple.
What I did was to use keepass to store most of TOTP and use Yubikey to unlock it. Absolute critical ones like email is saved directly in Yubikey.
Last year Cloudflare had some offers to buy Yubikeys at half price. Bought two of them. Using these hardware keys is better than trusting phone to be single failure and getting locked out.
Do you happen to have one more invite?
Same. Switching users didn’t work in Plasma 6 and switched back to Gnome.
I didn’t want to containerize every installed app. Switched to Arch and don’t have to worry about it.
This looks to be more powerful and has more potential. Thanks for sharing.
Then that must be one tool that’s stuck in past and willing to include more features.
And also a sign original developers have lost interest in project.
Seems to be an abandoned project? Last code change was three years back.
No snaps or flatpak by default.
Even without plugins it’s very much usable as a daily driver.
Treesitter is now implemented. Setting up LSP was easier than in neovim. Now it feel fairly complete and ready for plugin system.
I was totally impressed by helix. I would suggest anyone starting new to start with helix instead of vim/neovim.
Hopefully helix would have plug-in system in near future.
I like flatpaks but bundling everything as flatpak is a overkill.
Installed Arch couple of weeks back and was surprised how easy it had become once I overcame the first hurdle of connecting to wifi from command line.
Only thing I’m not happy with is the font rendering in Firefox. Hard to say if it is Arch or Firefox.
Firefox iOS is crippled by Apple’s policy. Orion browser has shown it’s possible to install Firefox extensions on iOS. Hope Firefox implements something similar.
Obsidian is good but not sure how well it works on touchscreen.
Yes, I did. And then promptly uninstalled.
May be, instead of trying to be on all platforms team can make it the best one platform.
On Mac, thunderbird doesn’t match the UX or stability of default Mail app which hasn’t seem much changes in recent years.
On Linux, there is no good alternative.
Thunderbird is still bad. Except for privacy.
Mandrake.
And then to Debian and to Ubuntu for a good time. Now using Arch mainly to avoid Snap & Flatpak.