Daeraxa

joined 2 years ago
[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 7 points 2 months ago

My favourite cuisines I've had which were not common ones you can just find on any high street here were mostly found during the height of covid when I was working quite a way from home but the hotel's restaurant was closed so I had to order delivery each night.

  • Nigerian: Ordered this a few times, peppersoup, moin moin, draw soup, eba amongst the things I had. Soon after a West African section opened in my local supermarket so I could at least get some of the main ingredients to cook some at home.
  • Ethiopian: Amazing, not tried cooking any yet, some ingredients seem hard to come by
  • Afghan: Had a bunch of times as there was a restaurant in my town
  • Sri Lankan: Love it, superficially similar to Indian food but I was surprised just how different it was and has become one of my favourites that I cook at home with regularity.
[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 16 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Pulsar is a fork of Atom under active development. We don't publish a flatpak (yet) but there is a community maintained flatpak for it.

Otherwise if you want to look at something else I'd give Lite XL, Lapce or even Zed (it has now been open sourced and looks like it has a flatpak available) a look as interesting alternatives.

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 6 points 3 months ago

Pulsar is the current maintained fork of that project, we forked it before it got shut down and are actively developing it,

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 months ago

Yes and no. The original project is dead but we forked it and continue to maintain and improve it as Pulsar

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 8 points 3 months ago

Joplin is a note taking app that stores its data in an sqlite database (easy to query but not a good idea to write to it) but there is also a command line version and both versions support access via a data API.

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 6 points 4 months ago (1 children)

What about something like navi - https://github.com/denisidoro/navi. Basically an interactive cheat sheet that has commands pre-loaded (or that you can make yourself).

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 months ago

Watch this space for the full history, I'm literally putting the final touches on a blog post that will go into details of how Atom started then how it became Pulsar as a little celebration after we hit 3k stars.

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 7 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Just to clarify, the Pulsar devs aren't ex-Atom devs. Some of the team are from atom-community but none of the core Pulsar team were part of the official Atom team.

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 months ago

And I wasn't aware of the Elementary thing with Flatpak! Admittedly I hadn't really thought of it in that way, I was thinking something more akin to F-droid where there are a couple of extra repos you can add which have applications not on the main one due to slightly looser requirements. But making it specifically for apps for that ecosystem in particular makes a lot of sense.

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (3 children)

Not officially but people have managed to reverse engineer it before in order to host their own - https://forum.snapcraft.io/t/lol-an-open-source-snap-server-implementation/27109

Whilst I do get the sentiment (and in no way do I support Canonical in keeping it proprietary), how likely is it that alternative Snap repos are going to show up if they did make it possible? Even with Flatpak where it is encouraged and documented I don't think I've heard of anyone setting up a Flathub alternative of any significance.

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 3 points 4 months ago (7 children)

(except snap, but they seem too Ubuntu specific).

For what it is worth you can install Snap on most distros. https://snapcraft.io/docs/installing-snapd

[–] Daeraxa@lemmy.ml 45 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (2 children)

From the conversation it seems to be a similar situation to the project I'm with is in. The flatpak is essentially community maintained rather than being directly supported by the team. To become verified it needs to be done so by a representative of the maintainers of the software. To be verified it doesn't have to have a team member involved in it but this is a requirement Inkscape seem to have imposed.

For us we just aren't in a position to want to support it officially just yet, we have some major upgrades coming to our underlying tech stack that will introduce a whole bunch of stuff that will allow various XDG portals etc. to work properly with the Flatpak sandboxing model. To support it now would involve tons of workarounds which would need to be removed later.

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