I've been using https://containertoolbx.org/ recently to manage my "other distro" requirements. It doesn't do anything special but works nicely as a wrapper around podman and does all the bind mounts and uid mappings so you can just enter your $HOME as though you have set up your account in a new OS.
stsquad
Also the PFN page locking patches so device memory can be reliably shared with VMs (used for some of the virtio-gpu modes).
That was a trip down memory lane. I think a lot of the engineers that worked at Transmeta ended up in places like Intel (and maybe Apple?) which tracks with them being an early pioneer in managing power envelopes.
Signal is the non-corporate replacement for What's App although realistically you end up having both due to network effects.
I can kinda see where the vacuum and (lack of) gravity might help with crystal growth but how do you then return something that sensitive back to earth?
I've never really gotten on with the trackpads although they do feel nice and tactile. I've now got a dock setup so I can switch my primary monitor across to the steam deck along with the audio and a usb switch for my keyboard and mouse. I'm finally catching up with the RTS and strategy games in my unplayed queue.
I use foot which is Wayland aware and renders Unicode fonts. Honestly I don't need much from the terminal itself as I'm usually in tmux to deal with all the "tabs" and scrollback.
Quite. Servers aren't free and someone needs to pay the bills and increasingly distribute the moderation load. I'm happy with my Mastodon and following a few federated accounts on threads and bsky. But I'm not going to someone they are a bad person for choosing something that is familiar yet a little different while escaping x/itter.
But little by little, they started asking Jay and the team for moderation tools, and to kick people off. And unfortunately they followed through with it.
This bit I don't get. Even on Lemmy and Mastodon we need moderation tools and arguably the current provisions aren't fit for purpose. It's not something that can just be pushed to the individual users and most hobbyists who want to spin up public servers don't want to be spending their time wading through reports and CSAM. How to provide a safe environment for users is still an unsolved problem in the fediverse so it's no wonder people drift to corporate controlled servers which say least nominally have the resources to do something about it.
Ah that will be it. Still grey on transparent isn't super accessible.
I'm not sure why it rendered so poorly in Lemmy. It's a terrible colour scheme but at least I could make out the bars when I followed the link.
The OSI have had a go: https://opensource.org/ai/open-source-ai-definition