openpgp4fpr:2265D7F3A7B095CC3918630B6A6CD5B765632D3A
@discuss.tchncs.de
openpgp4fpr:2265D7F3A7B095CC3918630B6A6CD5B765632D3A
OP seems to be on a crusade, cross-posting this to 4 lemmy communities.
Anyway, this: https://github.com/...
As Jean said, it will have a setting to toggle the Kayak integration and it will be opt-in (disabled by default) to avoid an Anti-Feature on F-Droid.
It will get trained on some comment posts.
Let reddit die. Join Lemmy or /kbin. https://join-lemmy.org/ https://kbin.pub/
OP seems to be on a crusade, cross-posting this to 4 lemmy communities.
Anyway, this: https://github.com/...
As Jean said, it will have a setting to toggle the Kayak integration and it will be opt-in (disabled by default) to avoid an Anti-Feature on F-Droid.
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=ir+remote+codes&ia=web third hit: https://github.com/probonopd/irdb
There is the Lemmy.world Admin Response to Defederation from Exploding Heads with some pointers.
First choice GIMP. Then, Digikam has an image editor that provides a number of tools. Not as detailed and sophisticated as GIMP but does most things needed.
There was the particular LiMux one in Munich that was "solved" by Microsoft moving their head quarter to a district of Munich and the then new conservative coalition in town government thanked them by rolling all back and buying MS products instead.
Someone gave a little overview in that Hacker News topic mentioned.
Right, no "soundproof" curtain will absorb low frequency noise (which street noise unfortunately to a large extend consists of), regardless what ads are trying to sell you. Heavy curtains can absorb high and mid range frequencies quite well and professional acoustic curtains made of heavy (≥500 g/m²) Molton or Calmuc are the best you could get (the cloth costs about 10-15 €/m²), but if honest producers will tell you they won't help against low frequency noise. Anyway, if your windows aren't too large you could try that for a few bucks..
The best bet are new insulated vacuum triple glass windows that aren't cheap at all.
Depends on what your language's script is then with assigned Unicode characters, how wide-spread it is, when fonts will support the glyphs, and what you mean by "changes to be available on my local OS". What OS? What does available mean here? Do you expect the OS UI to be in your language? Doubtful. Some desktop environment maybe somewhen. Programs using ICU are more likely to support specific script related features (e.g. word/line breaking, transliteration) when ICU will support Unicode 16 in its next version. Locale specifics may have to wait for or could be contributed to CLDR that is also used by ICU. Availability of any UI in the language mostly depends on whether translators contribute to the relevant projects.
thanks for using Leebra!
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