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But they have shitty specs and are too slow.
My guess is that they want a cheaper and faster phone but with poor cameras because they don’t use it for photos
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Linux admin with 20 years experience, looking for "beginner" distro [Solved, the real beginner distro was the Debian I've used along the way]7·1 year agoYes. You can read about it here: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/fedora-silverblue/technical-information/#filesystem-layout
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Guys will meet him and just say "hell yeah!"50·1 year agoHell yeah
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•This website that threatens anyone who right clicksEnglish1·1 year agodeleted by creator
While it’s weird that they waited so long,
I think they are afraid emulation on steam deck gains traction.
Since it runs Linux, you could install and run Nintendo games on a competitor portable console that has a lot more games and a more powerful hardware
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Report: Apple is testing foldable iPhones, having the same problems as everyone elseEnglish2·1 year agoI think the solution is bigger pockets.
I can easily fit my 6.43 inches phone on my pockets, but that might not be true with women clothes.
Unless you want to have a tablet size screen in your pocket. Then I can see why foldable screens would be appealing
Makes sense. I only pay for games when they get discounted, so I didn’t know
I think that only happens when you don’t use windows for many months, which might be true for Linux users
That used to be true a few years ago, but now games just works without any tinkering from my experience. Except some online games due to kernel level anti cheats (like Fortnite and Valorant), but I prefer single player games anyway
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•KDE's Nate Graham On X11 Being A Bad Platform & The Wayland Future7·2 years agoinput-leap will but it’s still in development
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Tokyo taxi driver arrested for allegedly running into and killing pigeonEnglish381·2 years agoI’m all for defensive driving, but if an animal (or someone) jumps at the front of your car at the last moment, how can you avoid it?
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Recognizing fake news now a required subject in California schoolsEnglish2·2 years agoI agree. That’s what I learn when I was in school. We also had to identify objective and subjective texts
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•"[GNU/]Linux being secure is a common misconception in the security and privacy realm."English3·2 years agoYou’re correct, but just like you said, many applications need that.
If I install LibreOffice on Windows or Android, it’ll also have access to all my files. I really don’t see how that makes Linux more insecure.
Sure, ideally it would use portals, I just don’t like the attitude of the blog post.
Addressing concerns or areas for improvement, and suggesting users solutions like installing Flatseal, would be far more constructive. Even better would be submitting pull requests to enhance security themselves, since they seem to know so much about it. Instead, they’re just spreading FUD and complaining about small problems or nonsensical arguments like Windows adopting rust. Since when Rust is more used on Windows than Linux?
For instance, the blog post mentions Xorg’s security concerns but overlooks mentioning Xorg’s alternative Wayland, the default in most distributions when using KDE Plasma or Gnome, which are also the most used.
If security is so important, there are distros like Qubes OS, but most users don’t need that level of paranoia, specially if it ruins workflow, performance and productivity
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•"[GNU/]Linux being secure is a common misconception in the security and privacy realm."English6·2 years agoAs far as I know, the only possible way to escape the sandbox is to use
flatpak-spawn --host
and add--talk-name=org.freedesktop.Flatpak
but I only ever seen that on apps like vscode.Imo, the point of flatpak’s sandbox is to give an extra layer of protection in case of security vulnerabilities. Permissions exist so apps can still work as they’re supposed to. It’s not a virtual machine isolated from the rest of the system where you can or should install malware.
Besides, the manifest is public and needs to be approved to be on the default repository.
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•"[GNU/]Linux being secure is a common misconception in the security and privacy realm."English4·2 years agoEven if a flatpak app has full access to host, they can’t read the private data of other flatpak apps (~/.var).
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•"[GNU/]Linux being secure is a common misconception in the security and privacy realm."202·2 years agoFirst thing I read and it’s not even true.
Flatpak’s permissions are also far too broad to be meaningful. For example, many applications come with the filesystem=home or filesystem=host permissions, which grant read-write access to the user’s home directory
You can absolutely have more narrow permissions
For example, by default, Firefox only has read/write access to xdg-download and mpv only has read access to host and write access to xdg-pictures (to save screenshots). Discord by default only has read access to xdg-videos and xdg-pictures and write access to xdg-download.
I’m not even going to waste time reading the rest…
wreckage@lemmy.worldto Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Linux vs Windows tested in 10 games - Linux 17% faster on AverageEnglish18·2 years agoI don’t even check protondb anymore. If it’s a single player game with no anticheats involved, I know it’ll work.
The only reason I still have a windows Partition, is due to the lack of HDR support on Linux.
/me Laughs in Linux