Damn dude, KDE Plasma 6.4.3 came out nearly a year ago.
Will we need to wait another year for Bigscreen mode in 6.7 that came out recently?
That's a long time to wait for a Arch-based distro that gets near instantaneous releases btw.
@sh.itjust.works
Damn dude, KDE Plasma 6.4.3 came out nearly a year ago.
Will we need to wait another year for Bigscreen mode in 6.7 that came out recently?
That's a long time to wait for a Arch-based distro that gets near instantaneous releases btw.
I have a GNU/Linux phone I carry in my other pocket. Here are the biggest issues I can see:
Mobile GNU/Linux is getting better, but I think it is 5-10 years out from what's needed. I suppose people need to adopt Desktop first. The nice thing is you can install Android apps including Google Play on it natively, and they appear in your app drawer like a regular app
Skit based off of Dude, Where's My Car? https://youtu.be/oqwzuiSy9y0
Google has no incentive to walk back, especially given what they saw Apple has been able to get away with on their end. And as we've seen with AOSP publishing delays, device tree information restrictions, locked bootloaders, they are making it increasingly hard for Android to be an OS that can be forked and installed on devices, let alone for you to install your own software.
The community ought to prepare for the realities of this, and put mitigation measures in place. Valve saw the similar direction Windows is going years ago, and made the same decision: GNU/Linux is the next best truly open/free-as-in-freedom experience, and we should all aim to use and improve that ecosystem on smaller form factors. Waydroid/ATL can act as temporary bridges for both developers and users alike while native binaries are ported.
If you're making new apps, target to develop with qt/qml + rust so it can run on the only GNU/Linux equivalent of Android WearOS, AsteroidOS. This let's you deploy one codebase on watches, phones, tablets, and computers screen sizes with a convergent design.
Redmine is the top self-hosted alternative to Jira
They moved the repo to be back home, and upgraded the database to v2 https://github.com/...
thanks for using Leebra!
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