I’ve resorted to just syncing my fault folder using Syncthing externally, surprisingly convenient
Cat and Tech enthusiast from Germany. Account by @cyrus@wetdry.world
I’ve resorted to just syncing my fault folder using Syncthing externally, surprisingly convenient
If you wanna go nuts on the data, probably Obsidian.md with the built-in Daily Note plugin and the Dataview plugin, which allows you to do all kinds of crazy operations on the data in your vault as if it was a database.
If you wanna go less nuts, obsidian still has tagging, linking notes, daily notes, and all kinds of other stuff built-in and is extensible by things like the Calendar plugin from the community.
And everything is stored as plain Markdown with the occasional hint of JSON (for some plugins) so you’re not locked into using Obsidian until the end of time. Your data is yours.
(I realise this sounds like an ad but I’ve just been using Obsidian for years now and I enjoy it)
It’s not a traditional matrix client mind you, and when I say “Matrix First” I mean architecturally.
Yes.
After their plan of starting with local iMessage and expanding later didn’t turn out well, they turned it around. Start with Matrix, add local bridges later.
The current application is based on the Beeper Mini codebase, is Matrix-First and will soon allow you to use local bridges to better preserve E2EE. As seen by some MSCs opened up by the beeper team, they are also looking into encrypted chat backups with these local bridges.
Yeah but logically speaking that’s what EX looks fort, and chances are that it’ll work (because why else would it be in the response?)
Yes, the entire point is that it is the client where Sliding-Sync is being developed and tested.
Open https://yourserver.example/.well-known/matrix/client
and see if this part exists in it:
"org.matrix.msc3575.proxy": {
"url": "https://slidingsync.lab.matrix.org"
}
if so, chances are it’ll just work.
activism.
Video rooms are coming, Element is currently working on MatrixRTC, for Matrkx-Native VoIP.
Demo is at https://call.element.io, Element X on mobile implements this and soon™ the desktop client will too.
Bazzite is a Fedora Atomic-based operating system intended for Gaming, so you get a lot of the same benefits of that whilst still including all kinds of Gaming-Focused tweaks and patches out of the box. It is also immutable, e.g the system cannot be modified arbitrarily, whilst offering tools to still make modifications to the installed images if you want.
One thing that Steam/Valve has done with the Steam Deck is lock down the ISO by default, and provide no tools to modify your image persistently. That is of course on purpose, because that works for 99% of users, but the 1% of users may wanna use something where they can, for instance, overlay packages and keep them with updates, or apply extra gaming-focused tweaks that may be more of a hassle to maintain on SteamOS.
For instance, I use Fedora Silverblue daily on my Desktop, and even though it is immutable just like the Deck, it offers me tools to modify my image as I see fit and have the same modifications be applied to future updates too.
I don’t know if they’re all flatpak
They should be, the Steam Deck updates system components separately through steam.
As a diagnostic step, you might wanna run flatpak update
in a new Konsole window to see if there are any errors that Discover might not be telling you about.
The System’s VPN imementation is broken. All of them are broken.
Syncthing does have an Android app, but I’ve never looked into doing anything syncthing-related on iOS because I simply don’t have any iOS devices :/