I’ve found that the Proton apps do a decent job of replacing Google’s suite of apps like Drive, Mail and Calendar.
I put the “disco” in “disconnecting from reality”.
I’ve found that the Proton apps do a decent job of replacing Google’s suite of apps like Drive, Mail and Calendar.
I’m in the same boat as you. I tried running Bazzite a while back. Most of my Linux experience has been with Pop!_OS, and gaming didn’t seem easier than what I was used so, because Pop is already ridiculously easy to run. I’d love to know what I’m missing.
You’re not wrong, but like the duress pin, it would be a nice feature to have. Not everyone would have to set a duress fingerprint, just the people who find value in it.
The Proton Drive app can automatically sync pictures from your phone. The Proton ecosystem as a whole is a good alternative to Google’s.
Cool feature, I wonder if a duress fingerprint will be introduced in the future?
The upcoming Cosmic desktop by Pop!_OS has the exact feature you’re describing.
I was really intrigued by the phone mask offering, but you are limited to 75 texts a month, and 50 minutes of talk time. Given other limitations of the service, I think it’s a far better deal to just get a fully pledged phone plan from someone like Mint mobile.
I was really intrigued by the phone mask offering, but you are limited to 75 texts a month, and 50 minutes of talk time. Given other limitations of the service, I think it’s a far better deal to just get a fully pledged phone plan from someone like Mint mobile.
KOReader is a pretty decent ereader option, it matches what I put on my Kobo.
I doubt many people will be willing to de-bloat their WIndows install, because there is a lot of overlap between the type of person that would be willing to go through all the hurdles of de-bloating, and the type of person that is already on Linux.
I start with Subscribed/Active to get my fix for the content I want to see, and then Subscribed/New to contribute comments that aren’t parroting what others have already said.
Although its marketed to both Linux and Windows users, you can really tell the attention and care that went into making this a Linux friendly machine.
My only wish is that their keyboards didn’t have the Windows logo for the Super key. Because of that (and partially because I like a Colemak layout better), I ended up going with the blank keycaps.
Lemmy seems a lot less toxic than Reddit. Every now and then I see comments here of people that are assholes, but its not the norm. Whenever I would check the comment feeds in Reddit, so many of them devolve into petty bickering. It seemed like a quarter of the user base set out that day to either be pissed off, or to piss someone else off.